| Literature DB >> 16677381 |
Rishi L Khan1, Gregory E Gonye, Guang Gao, James S Schwaber.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Using microarrays by co-hybridizing two samples labeled with different dyes enables differential gene expression measurements and comparisons across slides while controlling for within-slide variability. Typically one dye produces weaker signal intensities than the other often causing signals to be undetectable. In addition, undetectable spots represent a large problem for two-color microarray designs and most arrays contain at least 40% undetectable spots even when labeled with reference samples such as Stratagene's Universal Reference RNAs.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16677381 PMCID: PMC1475850 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-7-109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Schematic of vRNA production. (a) The parental EST clone vector (pT7T3D-pac) is used as a template for PCR with GF200 primers. (b) The PCR product is further amplified and converted to aRNA via an in vitro transcription reaction. (c) The aRNA is reverse transcribed and incorporated with amino allyl dUTP creating vcDNA. (d) The vcDNA is coupled with Cy3 dye. (e) The product of eight labeling reactions are combined (20 uL) and diluted to 125 uL.
Signal to noise ratio (SNR) and signal to background ratio (SBR) detectability metrics microarray datasets. The first 20 microarray datasets use Stratagene Universal Reference RNA™ as a reference. The bottom 2 microarray datasets are datasets generated by our laboratory
| SNR > 3 | SBR > 2 | |||||||
| Experiment | Platform | Cy3 | Cy5 | Both | Cy3 | Cy5 | Both | Pubmed ID |
| GSE332 | GPL260 | 89% | 88% | 87% | 68% | 67% | 64% | |
| GSE333 | GPL260 | 89% | 80% | 80% | 66% | 49% | 47% | |
| GSE432 | GPL285 | 55% | 24% | 24% | 42% | 25% | 24% | |
| GSE1041 | GPL981 | 65% | 48% | 47% | 75% | 68% | 66% | |
| GSE1138 | GPL977 | 58% | 48% | 42% | 82% | 72% | 69% | 15156144 |
| GSE1319 | GPL1197 | 91% | 83% | 83% | 86% | 88% | 84% | 15328174 |
| GSE1486 | GPL1225 | 33% | 27% | 19% | 18% | 37% | 16% | |
| GSE1533 | GPL1299 | 20% | 19% | 14% | 25% | 34% | 21% | |
| GSE1645 | GPL1384 | 54% | 51% | 46% | 63% | 63% | 58% | 15718295 |
| GSE1705 | GPL1390 | 96% | 86% | 85% | 91% | 87% | 87% | |
| GSE1705 | GPL885 | 87% | 59% | 58% | 80% | 71% | 70% | |
| GSE1705 | GPL887 | 71% | 61% | 59% | 67% | 79% | 65% | |
| GSE1706 | GPL1390 | 88% | 75% | 74% | 81% | 83% | 77% | 15679094 |
| GSE1706 | GPL885 | 88% | 78% | 76% | 75% | 79% | 72% | 15679094 |
| GSE1706 | GPL887 | 76% | 54% | 53% | 71% | 56% | 56% | 15679094 |
| GSE1818 | GPL885 | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 97% | 97% | 15994931 |
| GSE2134 | GPL1786 | 86% | 89% | 83% | 89% | 89% | 87% | |
| GSE2900 | GPL2614 | 72% | 88% | 70% | 80% | 91% | 80% | 15838786 |
| GSE3023 | GPL2695 | 78% | 86% | 74% | 85% | 94% | 85% | 16168081 |
| GSE3023 | GPL2696 | 82% | 86% | 81% | 88% | 89% | 87% | 16168081 |
| GSE2718 | GPL2000 | 86% | 74% | 71% | 82% | 73% | 67% | 16189278 |
| vRNA | in-house | 97% | 95% | 93% | 97% | 90% | 87% | |
Figure 2Signal intensity (log2) of high (▲), medium (■) and low (●) mRNA abundances vs dilution. 1:25 dilution saturates high abundance RNA samples whereas 1:200 dilution results in undetectable signal for low abundance RNA. High, medium and low mRNA abundances. 1:50 dilution produces detectable but not saturated signal for the most spots.
Figure 3Histograms of background corrected spot intensities of reference samples. (a) Stratagene Universal Reference RNA™ from dataset GSE1706 (b) vRNA. Note that the range of background corrected spot intensities in a biologically derived reference (Stratagene Universal Reference RNA™) cover 11 orders of magnitude and the middle 50% of the spot intensities cover 5 orders of magnitude whereas background corrected spot intensities using vRNA covers 7 orders of magnitude and middle 50% of the spot intensities cover 2 orders of magnitude.
Figure 4Microarray images showing technical errors detected by vRNA. (a) The two subarrays on the right show two rows each that were not printed. Additionally there are several weaker spots that indicate less PCR product spotted in those locations. (b) Image of vRNA sample channel showing a large area of low signal intensities (a portion enclosed by the white circle) where labeled sample did not hybridize well to the slide, possibly due to an air bubble. (c) Image of the biological sample from the same microarray. It is not easy to see a hybridization problem on this channel because of the large variation of signal intensities.