Probe rank approaches for gene selection in oligonucleotide arrays with a small number of replicates |
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Authors: | Chen Dung-Tsa Chen James J Soong Seng-jaw |
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Affiliation: | Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Unit, Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 153 Wallace Tumor Institute, 1824 6th Avenue South, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA. dtchen@uab.edu |
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Abstract: | MOTIVATION: One major area of interest in analyzing oligonucleotide gene array data is identifying differentially expressed genes. A challenge to biostatisticians is to develop an approach to summarizing probe-level information that adequately reflects the true expression level while accounting for probe variation, chip variation and interaction effects. Various statistical tools, such as MAS and RMA, have been developed to address this issue. In these approaches, the probe level expression data are summarized into gene level data, which are then used for downstream statistical analysis. Since probe variation is often larger than chip variation and there is also a potential interaction effect between probe affinity and treatment effect, strategies such as a gene level analysis, may not be optimal. In this study, we propose a procedure to analyze probe level data for selecting differentially expressed genes under two treatment conditions (groups) with a small number of replicates. The probe level discrepancy between two groups can be measured by a difference of the percentiles of probe perfect-match (PM) ranks or of probe PM weighted ranks. The difference is then compared with a pre-specified threshold to determine differentially expressed genes. The probe level approach takes into account non-homogenous treatment effects and reduces possible cross-hybridization effects across a set of probes. RESULTS: The proposed approach is compared with MAS and RMA using two benchmark gene array datasets. Positive predictivity and sensitivity are used for evaluation. Results show the proposed approach has higher positive predictivity and higher sensitivity. AVAILABILITY: Available on request from the authors. CONTACT: dtchen@uab.edu. |
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