Dear Bioc,
Has someone ever used long oligo arrays to test if genes were
expressed or
not? I have two microarray slides on which oligonucleotides (65mer)
for genes
from a parasite genome were spotted. One gene has one oligo but
spotted twice
on each array. One slide has a RNA sample extracted from infected
tissues
(therefore mixture of both parasite RNAs and RNAs from host tissues)
co-hybridized with RNAs from uninfected host tissue (no parasite
RNAs).
Another is a biological replicate but with dye-swap. People want to
know what
parasite genes are expressed in the infected tissue. Is it possible to
do so?
Related publications are highly appreciated.
Best,
Xinxia
On 1/13/06 3:07 AM, "xpeng" <xpeng at="" utk.edu=""> wrote:
> Dear Bioc,
>
> Has someone ever used long oligo arrays to test if genes were
expressed or
> not? I have two microarray slides on which oligonucleotides (65mer)
for genes
> from a parasite genome were spotted. One gene has one oligo but
spotted twice
> on each array. One slide has a RNA sample extracted from infected
tissues
> (therefore mixture of both parasite RNAs and RNAs from host tissues)
> co-hybridized with RNAs from uninfected host tissue (no parasite
RNAs).
> Another is a biological replicate but with dye-swap. People want to
know what
> parasite genes are expressed in the infected tissue. Is it possible
to do so?
> Related publications are highly appreciated.
You cannot answer that DIRECTLY with this design, I don't think. You
could
look for differential expression between the two samples--that is
probably
as close as you can get. You can perhaps say what genes are NOT
expressed,
as those spots will have very low intensity (within the range of
background), but that doesn't imply that the others are expressed.
And, you
might think that all genes that show some signal AND are
differentially
expressed between the two samples would be expressed parasite genes,
but
these could also be due to regulation of the genes in the infected
host
combined with some cross-hybridization. So, I would look for
differentially-expressed genes and see what that can tell you. With
only
two samples, doing meaningful statistics will be difficult, but you
could
try using limma or some other moderated testing procedure designed for
small
samples (and able to account for your replicated probes).
Alternatively,
just rank the genes by fold change. In the end, if you REALLY want to
know
which genes are differentially expressed, another couple of arrays
would
probably help.
Sean
Hi Amy,
Thanks for the reply.
You are right. The uninfected tissue is a blank, in theory. But the
real
problem is that some probes cross-hybridize with house RNAs. I do not
know the
oligo sequence yet. They know that there are more host RNAs than
parasite RNAs
in the sample from the infected tissue, but not sure the percentage.
Yes, they are 2-color arrays. The problem here is what to compare. It
was
suggested to find genes with intensities higher than their own
backgrounds,
say 4-fold higer, but I doubt it. I appreciate more inputs on the
consequences
if it is done this way.
Best,
Xinxia
>===== Original Message From a.mikhail at abdn.ac.uk =====
>Hi Xinxia,
>
>Just curious about your message. It is quite common to look at
parasite
>genes being expressed at different stages of the parasite lifecycle,
>including when the parasite is in the host, as is the case for your
>infected tissue. However I'm a bit confused about the RNA you
>cohybridised with, as if there are no parasite RNAs in it you would
be
>comparing parasite gene expression in your infected tissue with a
blank
>(did I read correctly that your microarrays have only parasite genes
on
>them, not host genes?).
>
>Are you using 2-colour arrays? If so expression levels for each gene
are
>normally read from one condition relative to the other. This means
that
>whatever you co-hybridised with has to have the same set of genes
being
>expressed at some level - otherwise you have nothing to compare your
>condition of interest with. The results you get in this way are
relative
>expression levels for each gene of interest, not absolute expression
>levels. As I understand it you cannot use microarrays for absolute
>expression levels because there are too many factors that can disrupt
mRNA
>copy number during probe preparation - if you are interested in
actual
>copy number you would have to do something like quantitative RT-PCR.
>
>Hope this helps,
>
>Regards,
>Amy
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
>Dear Bioc,
>
>Has someone ever used long oligo arrays to test if genes were
expressed or
>
>not? I have two microarray slides on which oligonucleotides (65mer)
for genes
>from a parasite genome were spotted. One gene has one oligo but
spotted twice
>on each array. One slide has a RNA sample extracted from infected
tissues
>(therefore mixture of both parasite RNAs and RNAs from host tissues)
>co-hybridized with RNAs from uninfected host tissue (no parasite
RNAs).
>Another is a biological replicate but with dye-swap. People want to
know
>what
>parasite genes are expressed in the infected tissue. Is it possible
to do so?
>Related publications are highly appreciated.
>
>Best,
>Xinxia
>---------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
>
>
>
>-------------------------------------------
>Amy Mikhail
>Research student
>University of Aberdeen
>Zoology Building
>Tillydrone Avenue
>Aberdeen AB24 2TZ
>Scotland
>Email: a.mikhail at abdn.ac.uk
>Phone: 00-44-1224-272880 (lab)
On 1/13/06 12:49 PM, "xpeng" <xpeng at="" utk.edu=""> wrote:
> Hi Amy,
>
> Thanks for the reply.
>
> You are right. The uninfected tissue is a blank, in theory. But the
real
> problem is that some probes cross-hybridize with house RNAs. I do
not know the
> oligo sequence yet. They know that there are more host RNAs than
parasite RNAs
> in the sample from the infected tissue, but not sure the percentage.
>
> Yes, they are 2-color arrays. The problem here is what to compare.
It was
> suggested to find genes with intensities higher than their own
backgrounds,
> say 4-fold higer, but I doubt it. I appreciate more inputs on the
consequences
> if it is done this way.
Signals above background in the infected sample could be due to at
least
three possibilities:
1) Hybridization by the parasite RNA
2) Cross-hyb by the host RNA in the uninfected state
3) Additional cross-hyb by host RNA due to the infection
(upregulation of
genes not highly expressed in the uninfected state).
I agree with Amy that the best you can probably do is to look for
differentially-expressed genes between your uninfected host and the
infected
sample. I also agree with Amy that using absolute intensities as a
measure
of "expression" is probably not possible with most existing long-oligo
technologies (although some new technologies like illumina seem to be
working somewhat for that).
Sean
Hi all,
just as a matter of interest and for own understanding: On which base
have
the oligos on the chip been designed? Can you take it for sure that
these
oligos hybridize, in genetic theory, better with the parasite RNA than
with
certain host RNA? I didn't ever work with long oligo arrays, so I
can't
estimate how big this danger is in this case. So building upon the
three
cases Sean mentioned and the ranking by fold change, maybe it would
iluminate the case a little bit more to identify the oligo sequence of
genes
which seem interesting and blast it against the host genome, or at
least
what is known of it. Maybe this would give a little better impression
of how
big the effect of cross hybridization for this specific gene oligos
has
been. Does this sound sensible?
regards,
Benjamin
> -----Original Message-----
> From: bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch
> [mailto:bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch]On Behalf Of Sean
Davis
> Sent: 13 January 2006 19:03
> To: xpeng; a.mikhail at abdn.ac.uk
> Cc: Bioconductor
> Subject: Re: [BioC] presence/absence call using oligo array?
>
>
>
>
>
> On 1/13/06 12:49 PM, "xpeng" <xpeng at="" utk.edu=""> wrote:
>
> > Hi Amy,
> >
> > Thanks for the reply.
> >
> > You are right. The uninfected tissue is a blank, in theory. But
the real
> > problem is that some probes cross-hybridize with house RNAs. I
> do not know the
> > oligo sequence yet. They know that there are more host RNAs
> than parasite RNAs
> > in the sample from the infected tissue, but not sure the
percentage.
> >
> > Yes, they are 2-color arrays. The problem here is what to
> compare. It was
> > suggested to find genes with intensities higher than their own
> backgrounds,
> > say 4-fold higer, but I doubt it. I appreciate more inputs on
> the consequences
> > if it is done this way.
>
> Signals above background in the infected sample could be due to at
least
> three possibilities:
>
> 1) Hybridization by the parasite RNA
> 2) Cross-hyb by the host RNA in the uninfected state
> 3) Additional cross-hyb by host RNA due to the infection
(upregulation of
> genes not highly expressed in the uninfected state).
>
> I agree with Amy that the best you can probably do is to look for
> differentially-expressed genes between your uninfected host and
> the infected
> sample. I also agree with Amy that using absolute intensities as
> a measure
> of "expression" is probably not possible with most existing long-
oligo
> technologies (although some new technologies like illumina seem to
be
> working somewhat for that).
>
> Sean
>
> _______________________________________________
> Bioconductor mailing list
> Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor
>
I agree. Thanks a lot.
Even I want to find differentially expressed genes. How do I
normalize? The
oligos are designed based on parasite genes, while samples from
uninfected
tissue have no parasite RNAs.
Best,
Xinxia
>===== Original Message From Sean Davis <sdavis2 at="" mail.nih.gov="">
=====
>On 1/13/06 3:07 AM, "xpeng" <xpeng at="" utk.edu=""> wrote:
>
>> Dear Bioc,
>>
>> Has someone ever used long oligo arrays to test if genes were
expressed or
>> not? I have two microarray slides on which oligonucleotides (65mer)
for
genes
>> from a parasite genome were spotted. One gene has one oligo but
spotted
twice
>> on each array. One slide has a RNA sample extracted from infected
tissues
>> (therefore mixture of both parasite RNAs and RNAs from host
tissues)
>> co-hybridized with RNAs from uninfected host tissue (no parasite
RNAs).
>> Another is a biological replicate but with dye-swap. People want to
know
what
>> parasite genes are expressed in the infected tissue. Is it possible
to do
so?
>> Related publications are highly appreciated.
>
>You cannot answer that DIRECTLY with this design, I don't think. You
could
>look for differential expression between the two samples--that is
probably
>as close as you can get. You can perhaps say what genes are NOT
expressed,
>as those spots will have very low intensity (within the range of
>background), but that doesn't imply that the others are expressed.
And, you
>might think that all genes that show some signal AND are
differentially
>expressed between the two samples would be expressed parasite genes,
but
>these could also be due to regulation of the genes in the infected
host
>combined with some cross-hybridization. So, I would look for
>differentially-expressed genes and see what that can tell you. With
only
>two samples, doing meaningful statistics will be difficult, but you
could
>try using limma or some other moderated testing procedure designed
for small
>samples (and able to account for your replicated probes).
Alternatively,
>just rank the genes by fold change. In the end, if you REALLY want
to know
>which genes are differentially expressed, another couple of arrays
would
>probably help.
>
>Sean
>
>_______________________________________________
>Bioconductor mailing list
>Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch
>https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor
Thanks a lot.
What are the arrays or other technologies to survey the
presence/absence of
genes in a large scale? I noticed that Winzeler's lab published a
paper using
a Affy-like custom-made, high-density oligo array (Le Roch et al,
Science,
301:1503-1508).
Best,
Xinxia
>===== Original Message From Sean Davis <sdavis2 at="" mail.nih.gov="">
=====
>On 1/13/06 12:49 PM, "xpeng" <xpeng at="" utk.edu=""> wrote:
>
>> Hi Amy,
>>
>> Thanks for the reply.
>>
>> You are right. The uninfected tissue is a blank, in theory. But the
real
>> problem is that some probes cross-hybridize with house RNAs. I do
not know
the
>> oligo sequence yet. They know that there are more host RNAs than
parasite
RNAs
>> in the sample from the infected tissue, but not sure the
percentage.
>>
>> Yes, they are 2-color arrays. The problem here is what to compare.
It was
>> suggested to find genes with intensities higher than their own
backgrounds,
>> say 4-fold higer, but I doubt it. I appreciate more inputs on the
consequences
>> if it is done this way.
>
>Signals above background in the infected sample could be due to at
least
>three possibilities:
>
>1) Hybridization by the parasite RNA
>2) Cross-hyb by the host RNA in the uninfected state
>3) Additional cross-hyb by host RNA due to the infection
(upregulation of
>genes not highly expressed in the uninfected state).
>
>I agree with Amy that the best you can probably do is to look for
>differentially-expressed genes between your uninfected host and the
infected
>sample. I also agree with Amy that using absolute intensities as a
measure
>of "expression" is probably not possible with most existing long-
oligo
>technologies (although some new technologies like illumina seem to be
>working somewhat for that).
>
>Sean
Hi Xinxia,
Just curious about your message. It is quite common to look at
parasite
genes being expressed at different stages of the parasite lifecycle,
including when the parasite is in the host, as is the case for your
infected tissue. However I'm a bit confused about the RNA you
cohybridised with, as if there are no parasite RNAs in it you would be
comparing parasite gene expression in your infected tissue with a
blank
(did I read correctly that your microarrays have only parasite genes
on
them, not host genes?).
Are you using 2-colour arrays? If so expression levels for each gene
are
normally read from one condition relative to the other. This means
that
whatever you co-hybridised with has to have the same set of genes
being
expressed at some level - otherwise you have nothing to compare your
condition of interest with. The results you get in this way are
relative
expression levels for each gene of interest, not absolute expression
levels. As I understand it you cannot use microarrays for absolute
expression levels because there are too many factors that can disrupt
mRNA
copy number during probe preparation - if you are interested in actual
copy number you would have to do something like quantitative RT-PCR.
Hope this helps,
Regards,
Amy
----------------------------------------------------------------------
------
Dear Bioc,
Has someone ever used long oligo arrays to test if genes were
expressed or
not? I have two microarray slides on which oligonucleotides (65mer)
for genes
from a parasite genome were spotted. One gene has one oligo but
spotted twice
on each array. One slide has a RNA sample extracted from infected
tissues
(therefore mixture of both parasite RNAs and RNAs from host tissues)
co-hybridized with RNAs from uninfected host tissue (no parasite
RNAs).
Another is a biological replicate but with dye-swap. People want to
know
what
parasite genes are expressed in the infected tissue. Is it possible to
do so?
Related publications are highly appreciated.
Best,
Xinxia
----------------------------------------------------------------------
------
-------------------------------------------
Amy Mikhail
Research student
University of Aberdeen
Zoology Building
Tillydrone Avenue
Aberdeen AB24 2TZ
Scotland
Email: a.mikhail at abdn.ac.uk
Phone: 00-44-1224-272880 (lab)