| Literature DB >> 15176478 |
Paul Pavlidis1, Jie Qin, Victoria Arango, John J Mann, Etienne Sibille.
Abstract
One of the challenges in the analysis of gene expression data is placing the results in the context of other data available about genes and their relationships to each other. Here, we approach this problem in the study of gene expression changes associated with age in two areas of the human prefrontal cortex, comparing two computational methods. The first method, "overrepresentation analysis" (ORA), is based on statistically evaluating the fraction of genes in a particular gene ontology class found among the set of genes showing age-related changes in expression. The second method, "functional class scoring" (FCS), examines the statistical distribution of individual gene scores among all genes in the gene ontology class and does not involve an initial gene selection step. We find that FCS yields more consistent results than ORA, and the results of ORA depended strongly on the gene selection threshold. Our findings highlight the utility of functional class scoring for the analysis of complex expression data sets and emphasize the advantage of considering all available genomic information rather than sets of genes that pass a predetermined "threshold of significance."Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15176478 DOI: 10.1023/b:nere.0000023608.29741.45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurochem Res ISSN: 0364-3190 Impact factor: 3.996