| Literature DB >> 31809517 |
Aarti Gautam1, Duncan Donohue1,2, Allison Hoke1,3, Stacy Ann Miller1,3, Seshamalini Srinivasan1,2, Bintu Sowe1,3, Leanne Detwiler1,2, Jesse Lynch1,3, Michael Levangie1,2, Rasha Hammamieh1, Marti Jett1.
Abstract
Gene expression profiling using blood samples is a valuable tool for biomarker discovery in clinical studies. Different whole blood RNA collection and processing methods are highly variable and might confound comparisons of results across studies. The main aim of the current study is to compare how blood storage, extraction methodologies, and the blood components themselves may influence gene expression profiling. Whole blood and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples were collected in triplicate from five healthy donors. Whole blood was collected in RNAgard® and PAXgene® Blood RNA Tubes, as well as in collection tubes with anticoagulants such as dipotassium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (K2EDTA) and Acid Citrate Dextrose Solution A (ACD-A). PBMCs were separated using sodium citrate Cell Preparation Tubes (CPT™), FICOLL™, magnetic separation, and the LeukoLOCK™ methods. After blood collection, the LeukoLOCK™, K2EDTA and ACD-A blood tubes were shipped overnight using cold conditions and samples from the rest of the collection were immediately frozen with or without pre-processing. The RNA was isolated from whole blood and PBMCs using a total of 10 different experimental conditions employing several widely utilized RNA isolation methods. The RNA quality was assessed by RNA Integrity Number (RIN), which showed that all PBMC procedures had the highest RIN values when blood was stabilized in TRIzol® Reagent before RNA extraction. Initial data analysis showed that human blood stored and shipped at 4°C overnight performed equally well when checked for quality using RNA integrity number when compared to frozen stabilized blood. Comparisons within and across donor/method replicates showed signal-to-noise patterns which were not captured by RIN value alone. Pathway analysis using the top 1000 false discovery rate (FDR) corrected differentially expressed genes (DEGs) showed frozen vs. cold shipping conditions greatly impacted gene expression patterns in whole blood. However, the top 1000 FDR corrected DEGs from PBMCs preserved after frozen vs. cold shipping conditions (LeukoLOCK™ preserved in RNAlater®) revealed no significantly affected pathways. Our results provide novel insight into how RNA isolation, various storage, handling, and processing methodologies can influence RNA quality and apparent gene expression using blood samples. Careful consideration is necessary to avoid bias resulting from downstream processing. Better characterization of the effects of collection method idiosyncrasies will facilitate further research in understanding the effect of gene expression variability in human sample types.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31809517 PMCID: PMC6897427 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Sample collection, processing and RNA extraction: Whole blood was collected in triplicate followed by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) separation in a subset of samples.
The following sample collection tubes were used for the study: RNAgard®, PAXgene® RNA, EDTA, ACD-A, and CPT tubes. The PBMC separation was done using standard procedures for CPT tubes, and magnetic bead, LeukoLOCK™ and LSM methods. The samples were then stored at either 4°C (Cold) or -80°C (Frozen) and shipped overnight (o/n) for follow-up RNA extraction. Next, they were treated with one or more of several different RNA extraction procedures: Biomaxi Precip Buffer/ PAXgene® Blood miRNA, PAXgene® Blood miRNA, TRIzol® LS, ACK Lysing Buffer/ Qiagen miRNeasy, and TRIzol® Reagent manufacturer’s protocol.
General statistics for RNA concentration (in micrograms) and RNA integrity number (RIN) data per mL of blood.
The sample collection tube followed by RNA extraction procedure is listed in the rows. The PBMC separation procedure is also referred as PBMC prep. CV refers to coefficient of variation and SD refers to standard deviation and μg refers to microgram.
| Sample | Whole Blood | PBMC | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tube | EDTA | ACD-A | RNAgard® | PAXgene® | EDTA | CPT | ACD-A | |||
| RNA Extraction | TRIzol® | ACK_miRNA | TRIzol® | ACKmi RNA | Biomaxi™_PAXmiRNA | PAXmiRNA | TRIzol | |||
| PBMC Prep | LeukoLOCK® | LSM | CPT | Magnetic | ||||||
| 10.2 | 0.9 | 21.0 | 0.2 | 1.5 | 0.4 | 0.8 | 2.2 | 1.6 | 0.8 | |
| 24.7 | 2.0 | 54.1 | 0.4 | 4.0 | 1.0 | 2.0 | 5.3 | 4.2 | 2.0 | |
| 55.4 | 104.1 | 67.5 | 74.9 | 38.9 | 26.0 | 73.0 | 36.6 | 65.8 | 35.0 | |
| 1.3 | 1.7 | 1.4 | 1.3 | 0.9 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 1.4 | 0.3 | |
Overview of correlation ratio, distance ratio, and RIN medians.
Red denotes more favorable values (high RIN; low distance ratio; high correlation ratio) while green denotes less favorable values. The sample type refers to whole blood and PBMCs and method explains the RNA isolation procedure and/or PBMCs separation procedure.
| Sample type | Method | Corr. Ratio | Dist. Ratio | RIN median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PBMC | Magnetic separation | 1.024 | 0.901 | 8.9 |
| PBMC | CPT tubes | 1.024 | 0.891 | 9.3 |
| PBMC | LSM | 1.019 | 0.903 | 9.0 |
| Whole blood | ACD_RBC_lysis | 1.092 | 0.722 | 8.3 |
| Whole blood | ACD_TRIzol | 1.102 | 0.788 | 5.6 |
| Whole blood | EDTA_RBC_lysis | 1.082 | 0.827 | 8.4 |
| Whole blood | ACD_TRIzol | 1.075 | 0.843 | 5.9 |
| PBMC | LeukoLOCK™ separation | 1.034 | 0.909 | 8.2 |
| Whole blood | PAXgene® | 1.022 | 0.885 | 8.2 |
| Whole blood | RNAgard® | 1.040 | 0.801 | 4.9 |
Fig 2Microarray signal intensity distribution before and after normalization.
Raw (a) and normalized (b) microarray probe M values (log2 fold differences) obtained for five different individuals using all different blood collection systems. Colors represent individual donors.
Fig 3Two dimensional Sammon projection using the top 50% of most variable transcripts (25370) for whole blood (red) and PBMC (black). There is a clear distinction in clusters for PBMCs and whole blood sample processing as marked by a black tilted line. All whole blood samples are shown on left side and PBMC samples are on the right side of the plot. The (F) and (C) denotes the frozen and cold conditions for the sample collection and storage. The description of all the legends is given here. PBMCs samples: ACD_Magnetic- blood collected in ACD-A tubes and separated using magnetic method followed by extraction using TRIzol® method. CPT—blood collected in CPT tubes and PBMCs separation using manufacturer recommendations followed by extraction using TRIzol® method. EDTA_LSM- blood collected in EDTA tube and PBMC separation using LSM followed by extraction using TRIzol® method. EDTA_Leukolock- blood collected in EDTA tube, PBMCs separated using LeukoLOCK™ method followed by extraction using TRIzol® method. Whole blood samples: ACD- blood collected in ACD-A tube followed by RNA extraction using TRIzol® LS method. ACD_RBC lysis- blood collected in ACD-A tube followed by RBC lysis using ACK buffer and RNA extraction using miRNAeasy extraction kit. EDTA_RBC lysis -blood collected in EDTA tube followed by RBC lysis using ACK buffer and RNA extraction using miRNAeasy extraction kit. EDTA- blood collected in EDTA tube followed by RNA extraction using TRIzol® LS method. PAXgene- blood collected in PAXgene® tube followed by RNA extraction using PAXgene® blood miRNA kit. RNAgard—blood collected in RNAgard® tube followed by RNA extraction using Biomaxi™ Precip Buffer and PAXgene® Blood miRNA kit.
Fig 4Sammon mapping using Manhattan distance of all probes for PBMCs sample separation methods where non-frozen LeukoLOCK™ separated (red) and cryopreserved samples (black) are shown as two distinct groups. The legends are described Fig 3. The CPT tubes and LSM separated PBMCs are clustered together whereas magnetic separation and LeukoLOCK™ separated PBMCs are clustered as distinct clusters with all clusters marked using a dotted line. The (F) and (C) denotes the frozen and cold conditions of the sample storage before RNA extraction.
Fig 5Sammon mapping using Manhattan distance of significant probes (p<0.05) for whole blood sample preparation methods where non-preserved/cold conditions (red) and frozen/cryopreserved samples (black) are shown as two distinct groups and are shown separated by a black line. The legends are described in Fig 3.
Fig 6(A) Venn diagram showing the common number of DEGs where comparisons of PBMCs and whole blood are affected by cryopreservation (frozen) vs. cold conditions are done. (B) Venn diagram showing the common DEGs from top 1000 mapped IDs using IPA where comparisons of PBMCs and whole blood are affected by cryopreservation (frozen) vs. cold conditions.
The functions associated with hematological system development: Top 1000 FDR corrected DEGS from whole blood when frozen vs. cold conditions are compared using BH p-value (Benjamin-Hochberg corrected p-value) settings in IPA.
| Diseases or Functions Annotation | p-Value | # Molecules |
|---|---|---|
| Quantity of mononuclear leukocytes | 5.82E-14 | 85 |
| Quantity of lymphocytes | 9.93E-13 | 80 |
| Quantity of blood cells | 4.24E-12 | 102 |
| Quantity of leukocytes | 9.47E-12 | 93 |
| Quantity of T lymphocytes | 2.85E-09 | 58 |
| Quantity of hematopoietic progenitor cells | 6.46E-09 | 50 |
| Quantity of B lymphocytes | 7.11E-08 | 40 |
| Cell movement of natural killer cells | 2.80E-07 | 14 |
| Morphology of lymphoid tissue | 3.79E-07 | 53 |
| Lymphopoiesis | 4.44E-07 | 62 |
| Abnormal morphology of lymphoid organ | 6.91E-07 | 39 |
| Cell movement of leukocytes | 9.72E-07 | 71 |
| Recruitment of natural killer cells | 9.82E-07 | 7 |
| Cell movement of lymphocytes | 1.09E-06 | 42 |
| Function of T lymphocytes | 1.18E-06 | 29 |
| Accumulation of blood cells | 1.20E-06 | 32 |
| Formation of lymphoid tissue | 1.33E-06 | 37 |
| Morphology of lymphoid organ | 1.53E-06 | 48 |
| Quantity of thymocytes | 1.55E-06 | 27 |
| Differentiation of mononuclear leukocytes | 1.98E-06 | 63 |
| Leukopoiesis | 3.67E-06 | 69 |
| Cell movement of mononuclear leukocytes | 4.43E-06 | 46 |
| Homing of lymphocytes | 4.63E-06 | 20 |
| NK cell migration | 4.69E-06 | 10 |
| Differentiation of B lymphocytes | 5.52E-06 | 26 |
| Accumulation of leukocytes | 6.14E-06 | 29 |
| Extravasation of phagocytes | 7.08E-06 | 8 |
| Migration of mononuclear leukocytes | 7.10E-06 | 38 |
| Lymphocyte migration | 7.32E-06 | 36 |
| Function of lymphocytes | 7.55E-06 | 31 |
| Chemotaxis of lymphocytes | 1.08E-05 | 17 |
| Morphology of spleen | 1.18E-05 | 37 |
| Abnormal morphology of thymus gland | 1.22E-05 | 18 |
| Quantity of monocytes | 1.23E-05 | 16 |
| Homing of leukocytes | 1.35E-05 | 37 |
| Abnormal morphology of germinal center | 1.39E-05 | 11 |
| Activation of lymphocytes | 1.56E-05 | 41 |
| Recruitment of T lymphocytes | 1.84E-05 | 12 |
| Chemotaxis of leukocytes | 2.25E-05 | 35 |
| Activation of mononuclear leukocytes | 2.43E-05 | 42 |
| T cell homeostasis | 2.61E-05 | 48 |
| Recruitment of lymphocytes | 2.83E-05 | 14 |
| Extravasation of leukocytes | 3.45E-05 | 9 |
| Formation of lymphoid organ | 3.81E-05 | 28 |
| Proliferation of mononuclear leukocytes | 4.44E-05 | 60 |
| Accumulation of mononuclear leukocytes | 4.89E-05 | 18 |
| Morphology of thymus gland | 5.17E-05 | 21 |
| Proliferation of lymphocytes | 5.54E-05 | 59 |
| Extravasation of neutrophils | 6.73E-05 | 6 |
| Activation of blood cells | 6.92E-05 | 58 |
| Formation of lymph node | 7.62E-05 | 14 |
| Proliferation of immune cells | 7.95E-05 | 61 |
| Function of granulocytes | 8.19E-05 | 8 |
| Homing of mononuclear leukocytes | 8.40E-05 | 22 |
| Chemotaxis of natural killer cells | 8.60E-05 | 7 |
| Quantity of regulatory T lymphocytes | 9.13E-05 | 15 |
| Abnormal morphology of spleen | 9.44E-05 | 26 |
| Cell movement of T lymphocytes | 9.67E-05 | 24 |
| T cell migration | 1.21E-04 | 26 |
| T cell development | 1.25E-04 | 45 |
| Recruitment of leukocytes | 1.45E-04 | 30 |
| Development of hematopoietic system | 1.51E-04 | 30 |
| Morphology of lymph follicle | 1.62E-04 | 15 |
| Accumulation of lymphocytes | 1.63E-04 | 16 |
| Quantity of short-term hematopoietic stem cells | 1.73E-04 | 3 |
| Delay in accumulation of leukocytes | 1.73E-04 | 3 |
| Function of myeloid cells | 2.03E-04 | 20 |
| Recruitment of mononuclear leukocytes | 2.37E-04 | 15 |
| Activation of CD8+ T lymphocyte | 2.45E-04 | 6 |
| Chemotaxis of mononuclear leukocytes | 2.65E-04 | 19 |
| Emigration of mononuclear leukocytes | 2.79E-04 | 4 |
| Abnormal morphology of enlarged spleen | 3.31E-04 | 17 |
| Activation of T lymphocytes | 3.43E-04 | 30 |
| Cell proliferation of T lymphocytes | 3.47E-04 | 47 |
| Activation of leukocytes | 3.65E-04 | 52 |
| Quantity of CD4+ T-lymphocytes | 3.99E-04 | 17 |
| Migration of follicular B lymphocytes | 4.26E-04 | 4 |
| Egression of leukocytes | 4.27E-04 | 5 |
| Maturation of leukocytes | 4.35E-04 | 21 |
| Cell movement of B lymphocytes | 5.33E-04 | 12 |
| Development of bone marrow | 6.03E-04 | 20 |
| Accumulation of myeloid cells | 6.15E-04 | 18 |
| Quantity of long-term hematopoietic stem cells | 6.20E-04 | 4 |
| Accumulation of blood platelets | 6.20E-04 | 4 |
| Formation of thymus gland | 6.82E-04 | 17 |
| Response of lymphocytes | 7.17E-04 | 19 |
| Differentiation of T lymphocytes | 7.98E-04 | 32 |
| Osteoclastogenesis of bone marrow | 8.40E-04 | 7 |
| Egression of lymphocytes | 1.19E-03 | 4 |
| Cell movement of marginal-zone B lymphocytes | 1.19E-03 | 4 |
| Proliferation of B lymphocytes | 1.24E-03 | 25 |
| Circulation of blood | 1.32E-03 | 9 |
| Accumulation of phagocytes | 1.39E-03 | 15 |
| Deposition of blood platelets | 1.40E-03 | 3 |
| Differentiation of colony-forming erythroid cells | 1.40E-03 | 3 |
| Size of lymphoid organ | 1.44E-03 | 10 |
| Cell movement of cytotoxic T cells | 1.57E-03 | 4 |
| Abnormal quantity of leukocytes | 1.99E-03 | 10 |
| Homing of T lymphocytes | 2.02E-03 | 12 |
| Differentiation of B-1 lymphocytes | 2.04E-03 | 4 |
| Formation of germinal center | 2.05E-03 | 8 |
| Osteoclastogenesis of leukocytes | 2.05E-03 | 7 |
| Trafficking of macrophages | 2.18E-03 | 3 |
| Recruitment of blood platelets | 2.18E-03 | 3 |
| Activation of cytotoxic T cells | 2.30E-03 | 7 |
| Formation of spleen | 2.33E-03 | 10 |
| Homing of B lymphocytes | 2.35E-03 | 6 |
| Binding of professional phagocytic cells | 2.38E-03 | 18 |
| Quantity of myeloid cells | 2.57E-03 | 37 |
| Development of monocyte-derived macrophages | 2.59E-03 | 4 |
| Osteoclastogenesis of macrophages | 2.68E-03 | 6 |
| Aggregation of blood platelets | 2.72E-03 | 18 |
| Expansion of lymphocytes | 2.87E-03 | 16 |
| T cell response | 3.12E-03 | 15 |
| Expansion of leukocytes | 3.14E-03 | 17 |
| Lack of white pulp | 3.19E-03 | 3 |
| Proliferation of plasma cells | 3.19E-03 | 3 |
| Accumulation of granulocytes | 3.19E-03 | 11 |
| Activation of naive T lymphocytes | 3.24E-03 | 4 |
| Migration of thymocytes | 3.24E-03 | 4 |
| Osteoclastogenesis of bone marrow-derived macrophages | 3.25E-03 | 5 |
| Quantity of double-positive thymocyte | 3.41E-03 | 11 |
| Recruitment of macrophages | 3.41E-03 | 11 |
| Maturation of antigen presenting cells | 3.55E-03 | 12 |
| Quantity of follicular B lymphocytes | 3.55E-03 | 12 |
| Morphology of lymph node | 3.62E-03 | 15 |
| Delay in accumulation of T lymphocytes | 3.69E-03 | 2 |
Biofunctions and diseases in the order of p-value affected in whole blood when frozen vs. cold conditions are compared using top 1000 FDR corrected DEGs.
BH p-value refers to the Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p-value in IPA.
| Category | B-H p-value | # of molecules | # of functions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hematological System Development and Function | 6.68E-10-8.11E-02 | 167 | 127 |
| Tissue Morphology | 6.68E-10-8.11E-02 | 149 | 45 |
| Lymphoid Tissue Structure and Development | 5.71E-09-8.11E-02 | 128 | 73 |
| Cellular Function and Maintenance | 4.68E-06-3.06E-02 | 81 | 13 |
| Cell Death and Survival | 7.95E-06-8.11E-02 | 233 | 87 |
| Hematopoiesis | 7.95E-06-8.01E-02 | 91 | 21 |
| Organ Morphology | 4.33E-05-8.11E-02 | 86 | 23 |
| Humoral Immune Response | 5.1E-05-8.11E-02 | 65 | 20 |
| Cancer | 7.21E-05-7.78E-02 | 209 | 42 |
| Hematological Disease | 7.21E-05-8.11E-02 | 172 | 46 |
| Immunological Disease | 7.21E-05-7.96E-02 | 199 | 52 |
| Organismal Injury and Abnormalities | 7.21E-05-8.01E-02 | 313 | 115 |
| Cellular Movement | 1.69E-04-8.01E-02 | 134 | 51 |
| Immune Cell Trafficking | 1.69E-04-8.11E-02 | 96 | 49 |
| Inflammatory Disease | 1.7E-04-7.96E-02 | 125 | 15 |
| Inflammatory Response | 1.7E-04-8.11E-02 | 185 | 49 |
| Neurological Disease | 1.7E-04-8.01E-02 | 128 | 22 |
| Cellular Development | 2.22E-04-8.11E-02 | 172 | 37 |
| Cellular Growth and Proliferation | 2.22E-04-7.78E-02 | 161 | 32 |
| Embryonic Development | 2.22E-04-7.78E-02 | 144 | 21 |
| Organ Development | 2.22E-04-7.73E-02 | 121 | 21 |
| Organismal Development | 2.22E-04-7.73E-02 | 162 | 36 |
| Tissue Development | 2.22E-04-8.11E-02 | 143 | 50 |
| Cellular Assembly and Organization | 2.22E-04-7.73E-02 | 19 | 4 |
| DNA Replication, Recombination, and Repair | 2.22E-04-7.72E-02 | 33 | 7 |
| Post-Translational Modification | 2.22E-04-3E-02 | 64 | 4 |
| Protein Synthesis | 2.22E-04-8.11E-02 | 136 | 14 |
| Protein Trafficking | 2.22E-04-7.17E-02 | 46 | 4 |
| Cell Cycle | 2.91E-04-8.11E-02 | 127 | 15 |
| Gene Expression | 2.91E-04-8.11E-02 | 161 | 14 |
| Cell-To-Cell Signaling and Interaction | 3.22E-04-8.01E-02 | 97 | 30 |
| Cell-mediated Immune Response | 3.22E-04-7.77E-02 | 67 | 13 |
| Cell Morphology | 1.03E-03-8.11E-02 | 57 | 16 |
| Infectious Diseases | 1.09E-03-6.22E-02 | 134 | 8 |
| Connective Tissue Disorders | 2.72E-03-7.96E-02 | 102 | 14 |
| Skeletal and Muscular Disorders | 2.72E-03-7.96E-02 | 152 | 16 |
| Cardiovascular System Development and Function | 3.16E-03-7.73E-02 | 95 | 16 |
| Cardiovascular Disease | 4.49E-03-7.73E-02 | 52 | 11 |
| Developmental Disorder | 4.49E-03-6.33E-02 | 42 | 10 |
| Cell Signaling | 6.96E-03-4.26E-02 | 47 | 32 |
| Hereditary Disorder | 7.19E-03-6.33E-02 | 30 | 6 |
| Free Radical Scavenging | 7.76E-03-1.67E-02 | 42 | 2 |
| Renal and Urological Disease | 7.96E-03-7.77E-02 | 95 | 6 |
| Dermatological Diseases and Conditions | 8.1E-03-5.59E-02 | 64 | 4 |
| Gastrointestinal Disease | 8.51E-03-7.73E-02 | 58 | 10 |
| Hepatic System Disease | 8.51E-03-7.73E-02 | 44 | 8 |
| Antimicrobial Response | 8.51E-03-1.67E-02 | 28 | 2 |
| Connective Tissue Development and Function | 1.48E-02-7.78E-02 | 69 | 11 |
| Psychological Disorders | 2.06E-02-3.5E-02 | 59 | 2 |
| Nervous System Development and Function | 2.38E-02-4.1E-02 | 7 | 3 |
| Visual System Development and Function | 2.38E-02-8.11E-02 | 11 | 2 |
| Skeletal and Muscular System Development and Function | 2.45E-02-8.11E-02 | 67 | 14 |
| Cellular Compromise | 2.9E-02-8.02E-02 | 36 | 7 |
| Metabolic Disease | 3.05E-02-6.33E-02 | 93 | 3 |
| Ophthalmic Disease | 4.1E-02-4.1E-02 | 2 | 1 |
| RNA Post-Transcriptional Modification | 4.1E-02-4.1E-02 | 2 | 1 |
| Renal and Urological System Development and Function | 4.1E-02-6.7E-02 | 16 | 2 |
| Molecular Transport | 4.26E-02-7.17E-02 | 57 | 4 |
| Vitamin and Mineral Metabolism | 4.26E-02-4.26E-02 | 21 | 1 |
| Digestive System Development and Function | 4.4E-02-7.73E-02 | 27 | 2 |
| Hepatic System Development and Function | 4.4E-02-7.73E-02 | 27 | 2 |
| Tumor Morphology | 5.1E-02-7.73E-02 | 32 | 2 |
| Reproductive System Disease | 6E-02-6.09E-02 | 44 | 2 |
| Endocrine System Disorders | 6.09E-02-6.09E-02 | 3 | 1 |
| Reproductive System Development and Function | 6.09E-02-6.09E-02 | 3 | 1 |
| Organismal Survival | 6.32E-02-6.32E-02 | 155 | 1 |
| Energy Production | 6.7E-02-6.7E-02 | 4 | 1 |
| Nucleic Acid Metabolism | 6.7E-02-6.7E-02 | 4 | 1 |
| Small Molecule Biochemistry | 6.7E-02-6.7E-02 | 4 | 1 |
| Respiratory Disease | 6.9E-02-7.73E-02 | 9 | 3 |
Fig 7Hierarchical heatmap with diseases and bio-function category and top 5 high level functions are displayed and labeled inside the highlighted green border.
The visualization is a TreeMap (hierarchical heatmap) where the major boxes represent a family (or category) of related functions. Each individual colored rectangle is a particular biological function or disease and the color indicates associated log of the calculated BH corrected p-value: lower p value (purple), or higher p value (white). Darker colors indicate lower p values. In this default view, larger squares indicate more significant overlap between the genes perturbed in the dataset and the function or disease. The image has been cropped for better readability. Here data from whole blood when frozen vs. cold conditions are compared using top 1000 FDR corrected DEGs was used.