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Benjamin Otto
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830
@benjamin-otto-1519
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi guys,
although this is probably no problem concerning analysis maybe some of
you
have an idea what might be going wrong here.
We are observing a strange problem with GeneST Arrays from Affymetrix.
Independent from the experiment design and number of arrays we hardly
observe any differentially expressed genes using the "gene level"
analysis.
Maybe one to five genes if many and that would be without any multiple
testing correction. Even genes we know that they are regulated or
even
knocked out don't display any significant change. And we are talking
about
cell culture experiments in some cases. Switching to "exon level"
returns
some more candidates and our knowledge about the experiment tells us
they
might be true positives but by the regulation strength and total
number of
regulated candidates they might as well be false positives due to the
much
higher number of probesets.
Now the issue worrying us is, that we performed several smaller
studies with
the GeneST arrays know, mouse AND human, and didn't get a single study
yet
with remarkable results. We never observed such problems with the
"old"
human and murine whole genome arrays and all we get to hear from
Affymetrix
is ".well other groups report the GeneSTs are running much better and
more
sensitive than the old chips.and they are more robust .".
I don't think the statistical part is making the problems because we
tried
normalization with RMA and PLIER (I didn't try VSN yet, maybe I should
try
that) and I would expect a simple non-corrected Welch test and a
screening
of potential targets by eye-balling to find at least a bunch of hits.
But no
chance. And we are sticking to the standard kits and protocol from
Affymetrix in the lab. I already had a chat with the guys from Charite
and
Max-Planck in Berlin and from the Affymetrix Core Facility in Kiel,
Germany.
They are all doing just the same thing and getting nice results. We
couldn't
find a step we are doing significantly different on computer or in
lab.
So what I am interested in is: Does anybody of guys with experience
with the
GeneST arrays have an idea what might be causing the problem on our
side,
either already in lab or afterwards in the analysis?
Best regards,
Benjamin
PS: I know the best step to go forward from here is performing the
same
experiment on one of the old whole genome and on GeneST in parallel to
check
the result. Still maybe somebody has an idea before we start with
that.
___________________________________________
Benjamin Otto, PhD
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
Institute For Clinical Chemistry
Campus Forschung N27
Martinistr. 52,
D-20246 Hamburg
Tel.: +49 40 7410 51908
Fax.: +49 40 7410 54971
___________________________________________
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