RNA degradation... or not?
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Ken Simpson ▴ 70
@ken-simpson-520
Last seen 9.6 years ago
Dear Bioconductors, I apologise if this is not 100% appropriate for the list. I have seen data sets from a couple of experiments lately, each using four MOE430 version 2 chips, in which one chip of the four has a median PM which is a factor of three or four higher than on the others. When I do an RNA degradation plot, the aberrant chip has a big dip at the 3' end (the others look fine - the mean log PM increases pretty much linearly as you go 5' -> 3', and they are roughly parallel to each other) . Is this really indicative of RNA degradation, or am I misinterpreting or reading too much into the plot? It seems counterintuitive that a degraded sample would produce *higher* intensities. My collaborators did check their samples before labelling (using a Bioanalyser) and they all appeared to be fine, so the cause of the problem would appear to be downstream. If anyone else has seen similar behaviour, I'd be most interested to know - especially if they worked out what the cause was! Thanks in advance, Ken -- Dr. Ken Simpson Research Officer, Division of Genetics and Bioinformatics The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research 1G Royal Parade, Parkville, Vic 3050 Tel: (03) 9345 2628 ---
Genetics Genetics • 773 views
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@james-w-macdonald-5106
Last seen 10 hours ago
United States
Ken Simpson wrote: > Dear Bioconductors, > > I apologise if this is not 100% appropriate for the list. I have seen > data sets from a couple of experiments lately, each using four MOE430 > version 2 chips, in which one chip of the four has a median PM which is a > factor of three or four higher than on the others. When I do an RNA > degradation plot, the aberrant chip has a big dip at the 3' end (the > others look fine - the mean log PM increases pretty much linearly as you > go 5' -> 3', and they are roughly parallel to each other) . Is this > really indicative of RNA degradation, or am I misinterpreting or reading > too much into the plot? It seems counterintuitive that a degraded sample > would produce *higher* intensities. My collaborators did check their > samples before labelling (using a Bioanalyser) and they all appeared to be > fine, so the cause of the problem would appear to be downstream. If > anyone else has seen similar behaviour, I'd be most interested to know - > especially if they worked out what the cause was! We have not worked out the cause for this sort of thing, but in our experience this is usually caused by something going awry in the fragmentation step. Whenever we see this sort of thing, we re-run that sample starting at the fragmentation step and in probably 90% of the cases that is all you need to do. Unfortunately, the majority of the cost of an Affy experiment is the chip, so it is an expensive fix... Jim > > Thanks in advance, > > Ken > -- James W. MacDonald Affymetrix and cDNA Microarray Core University of Michigan Cancer Center 1500 E. Medical Center Drive 7410 CCGC Ann Arbor MI 48109 734-647-5623
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