Dung-Tsa Chen1, Sue-Hwa Lin, Seng-Jaw Soong. 1. Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Unit, Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 153 Wallace Tumor Institute, 1824 6th Avenue South, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA. dtchen@uab.edu
Abstract
MOTIVATION: Analysis of oligonucleotide array data, especially to select genes of interest, is a highly challenging task because of the large volume of information and various experimental factors. Moreover, interaction effect (i.e. expression changes depend on probe effects) complicates the analysis because current methods often use an additive model to analyze data. We propose an approach to address these issues with the aim of producing a more reliable selection of differentially expressed genes. The approach uses the rank for normalization, employs the percentile-range to measure expression variation, and applies various filters to monitor expression changes. RESULTS: We compare our approach with MAS and Dchip models. A data set from an angiogenesis study is used for illustration. Results show that our approach performs better than other methods either in identification of the positive control gene or in PCR confirmatory tests. In addition, the invariant set of genes in our approach provides an efficient way for normalization.
MOTIVATION: Analysis of oligonucleotide array data, especially to select genes of interest, is a highly challenging task because of the large volume of information and various experimental factors. Moreover, interaction effect (i.e. expression changes depend on probe effects) complicates the analysis because current methods often use an additive model to analyze data. We propose an approach to address these issues with the aim of producing a more reliable selection of differentially expressed genes. The approach uses the rank for normalization, employs the percentile-range to measure expression variation, and applies various filters to monitor expression changes. RESULTS: We compare our approach with MAS and Dchip models. A data set from an angiogenesis study is used for illustration. Results show that our approach performs better than other methods either in identification of the positive control gene or in PCR confirmatory tests. In addition, the invariant set of genes in our approach provides an efficient way for normalization.
Authors: James T Campanelli; Robert W Sandrock; Will Wheatley; Haipeng Xue; Jianhua Zheng; Feng Liang; Jonathan D Chesnut; Ming Zhan; Mahendra S Rao; Ying Liu Journal: BMC Dev Biol Date: 2008-10-23 Impact factor: 1.978