Limma factorial experiment: interaction parameter
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@donald-dunbar-886
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Oscar Rueda ▴ 40
@oscar-rueda-3347
Last seen 10.3 years ago
Dear Donald, Yes, the contrast to test the interaction effect should be DH-DC-CH+CC ((combo-control)-(x-control)-(y-control)). If you don't get significant probes it means that the effect of the combination of the two drugs is the sum of the marginal effects; that could make sense depending on the nature of your experiment. Hope it helps, Oscar On 29/3/11 16:27, "Donald Dunbar" <donald.dunbar@ed.ac.uk> wrote: Hello, I have a gene expression experiment with four replicates each for four groups: control, two drugs and their combination. Control (C.C) Drug1 (D.C) Drug2 (C.H) Drug1+Drug2 (D.H) I have imported the Affymetrix data, normalised and set up a design to analyse in Limma. C.C D.C C.H D.H 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 6 0 1 0 0 7 0 1 0 0 8 0 1 0 0 9 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 1 0 11 0 0 1 0 12 0 0 1 0 13 0 0 0 1 14 0 0 0 1 15 0 0 0 1 16 0 0 0 1 I initially set up contrasts and following lmFit, contrasts.fit, eBayes, and decideTests find differentially expressed probe-sets: drug 1 v control contrast 'D.C-C.C' gives 46 probesets drug 2 v control contrast 'C.H-C.C' gives 233 probesets drug 1 + drug 2 combination contrast 'D.H-C.C' gives 3897 probesets Clearly there are several thousand probe-sets differentially expressed by the drug combination and not by the individual drugs. I can find these crudely by filtering the p-values of the contrasts, but I would rather do it properly. I would like to define an interaction parameter and select differentially expressed genes. I read Gordon Smyth's Limma user guide and several helpful posts on this list but have so far failed to find an appropriate parametrization. The user guide's factorial example has sepatare controls for each treatment group so isn't applicable for me I think. James MacDonald gave a helpful reply to Suzanne Szak in May 2009 and I thought I'd try that: (combo-control)-(x-control)-(y-control) but I think I'm misunderstanding his answer: if I try this (D.H-C.C)-(D.C-C.C)-(C.H-C.C) I get no significant probe-sets. My own idea was (D.H-D.C)-(C.H-C.C) but that also gave no significant probe-sets and I think was a bit silly. Any help on this would be greatly appreciated. With best wishes, Donald -- Donald Dunbar University of Edinburgh donald.dunbar@ed.ac.uk Oscar M. Rueda, PhD. Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Breast Cancer Functional Genomics. Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute. Li Ka Shing Centre, Robinson Way. Cambridge CB2 0RE England This communication is from Cancer Research UK. Our website is at www.cancerresearchuk.org. We are a registered charity in England and Wales (1089464) and in Scotland (SC041666) and a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales under number 4325234. Our registered address is Angel Building, 407 St John Street, London, EC1V 4AD. Our central telephone number is 020 7242 0200. This communication and any attachments contain information which is confidential and may also be privileged. It is for the exclusive use of the intended recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient(s) please note that any form of disclosure, distribution, copying or use of this communication or the information in it or in any attachments is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender and delete the email and destroy any copies of it. E-mail communications cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error free, as information could be intercepted, corrupted, amended, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. We do not accept liability for any such matters or their consequences. Anyone who communicates with us by e-mail is taken to accept the risks in doing so. [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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