[BioC] Analysing multiple-platform gene expression data

Kauer Max maximilian.kauer at ccri.at
Mon Jan 31 13:31:49 CET 2011


Thanks Matt!
Great! Actually I have two more questions for frma:
1) could one use frma also for hgu133a2 arrays (with the null-distribution vectors for hgu133a arrays)? I guess not, but I thought I'd ask anyway
2) could I somewhere access the expression-distribution (not only the null-distribution) for all genes, i.e. the data matrices that you used to construct these distributions?

Thanks!
max






-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Matthew McCall [mailto:mccallm at gmail.com]
Gesendet: Do 27.01.2011 14:39
An: bioconductor at r-project.org; Kauer Max
Betreff: Re: [BioC] Analysing multiple-platform gene expression data
 
Max,

You can certainly use the z-scores from the barcode function to
combine hgu133a and hgu133plus2 data. Since the z-scores are based on
platform-specific null distributions, they have the same meaning
(number of sd's above the unexpressed mean) on all platforms. To gain
robustness to batch effects, you might consider going further and
using the actual barcode values (zeros and ones), but obviously this
depends on what downstream analysis you want to do.

Best,
Matt

On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 8:04 AM, Harris A. Jaffee <hj at jhu.edu> wrote:
>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
>> From: Kauer Max <maximilian.kauer at ccri.at>
>> Date: January 27, 2011 4:29:50 AM EST
>> To: Marc Carlson <mcarlson at fhcrc.org>, bioconductor at r-project.org
>> Subject: Re: [BioC] Analysing multiple-platform gene expression data
>>
>>
>> Hi,
>> along the same lines I wondered if one can take the z-scores from the
>> barcode() function in the frma package. From my understanding these scores
>> give a "distance" from the empirically defined value of no expression
>> (separately for hgu133a and hgu133plus2), so in theory these could be
>> comparable between platforms (?)
>> Does anybody have an opinion on that?
>>
>> Best,
>> Max
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>> Von: bioconductor-bounces at r-project.org im Auftrag von Marc Carlson
>> Gesendet: Mi 26.01.2011 18:45
>> An: bioconductor at r-project.org
>> Betreff: Re: [BioC] Analysing multiple-platform gene expression data
>>
>> Hi Gabriel,
>>
>> I would urge caution.  Because even though "on paper" the different
>> platforms might claim to be using many of the same probe sets, it is
>> possible to actually measure differences that seem to be caused by
>> nothing other than the fact that a given probeset was measured on one
>> chip type vs another.
>>
>>
>>  Marc
>>
>>
>> On 01/26/2011 01:25 AM, gabriel teku wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Jordi,
>>> When I said multiple Affy platforms I meant different Affy chips, e.g.
>>> hgu133a, hgu133plus2.
>>> Is it OK and possible to remove probes not present in both platforms?
>>> What are the bilogical/statistical implications of doing this.
>>>
>>> Thanks in advance
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 2:45 PM, Jordi Altirriba
>>> <altirriba at hotmail.com>wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> Dear Gabriel,
>>>> We would need more information. What do you mean by different types of
>>>> Affymetrix platforms? Platforms situated in different places, different
>>>> machines, different Affymetix chips, etc, etc.
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> Jordi Altirriba
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Message: 3
>>>> Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:53:43 +0200
>>>> From: gabriel teku <gabbyteku at gmail.com>
>>>> To: bioconductor at r-project.org
>>>> Subject: [BioC] Analysing multiple-platform gene expression data
>>>> Message-ID:
>>>> <AANLkTinzi+n2A=D4Nj_H3c4d4P7ruW3HF2BnKsB=vJO_ at mail.gmail.com>
>>>> Content-Type: text/plain
>>>>
>>>> HI All,
>>>> I'm trying to analyse microarray experiment data in which two types of
>>>> Affymetrix platforms were used. However, I don't know how to handle
>>>> these.
>>>> I'll be great if I could get a heads up right from the beginning in
>>>> terms
>>>> of
>>>> statistics, etc.
>>>>
>>>> Thanx
>>>> Gabriel
>>>>
>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>>>>
>>>        [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>>>
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>



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