| Literature DB >> 15607417 |
Todd C Mockler1, Simon Chan, Ambika Sundaresan, Huaming Chen, Steven E Jacobsen, Joseph R Ecker.
Abstract
DNA microarrays are a well-established technology for measuring gene expression levels. Microarrays designed for this purpose use relatively few probes for each gene and are biased toward known and predicted gene structures. Recently, high-density oligonucleotide-based whole-genome microarrays have emerged as a preferred platform for genomic analysis beyond simple gene expression profiling. Potential uses for such whole-genome arrays include empirical annotation of the transcriptome, chromatin-immunoprecipitation-chip studies, analysis of alternative splicing, characterization of the methylome (the methylation state of the genome), polymorphism discovery and genotyping, comparative genome hybridization, and genome resequencing. Here we review different whole-genome microarray designs and applications of this technology to obtain a wide variety of genomic scale information.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15607417 DOI: 10.1016/j.ygeno.2004.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genomics ISSN: 0888-7543 Impact factor: 5.736