| Literature DB >> 15113428 |
Vasily Sharov1, Ka Yin Kwong, Bryan Frank, Emily Chen, Jeremy Hasseman, Renee Gaspard, Yan Yu, Ivana Yang, John Quackenbush.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: DNA microarray assays typically compare two biological samples and present the results of those comparisons gene-by-gene as the logarithm base two of the ratio of the measured expression levels for the two samples.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15113428 PMCID: PMC400743 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6750-4-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Figure 1R-I plots for microarray expression data exhibit the limits of log-ratio measurements obtained on arrays. As the measured intensity on the arrays approaches its upper and lower limits, the dynamic range for accurately estimating fold-change measurements is also limited. Shown here are R-I plots for three different data sets showing the entire range (A,C,E) and a close-up of the upper end of the end of the effective range for array measurements (respectively B,D,F). The diamond-shape delimits the range of measurements obtainable on microarrays.
Figure 2The limitation on the dynamic range of log-ratio measurements, (A) shown here in the diamond-shaped gray-shaded box between the colored lines on an R-I plot, reflects the limited range of values that can be obtained from existing microarray technology which typically employ 16-bit array scanners that allow each channel on the arrays to produce measurements ranging in log2 values from 0 through 16. (B) The diamond area represents a rotation of the original axes, x = log2(G) and y = log2(R) to new axes and , followed by a simple rescaling to x" = [log2(R) + log2(G)]/2 and y" = [log2(R) - log2(G)].
Figure 3A common practice for low-intensity elements on the array is to set a "floor" representing a minimum intensity that is reported. This eliminates "undefined" log-ratio values that come from reported zeros, but produces "whiskers" in the R-I plot.