Entering edit mode
Pan Du
★
1.2k
@pan-du-2010
Last seen 10.3 years ago
Hi Lavinia
It is hard to answer your question without knowing the quality of your
data.
My suggestion is performing visually color bias check first before
applying
color bias adjustment. If the color bias is not severe, then only
perform
conservative adjustment (scaling and shift adjust) or not perform any
color
adjustment at all. Need to know the smooth quantile color adjustment
has
strong assumption of the data (same distribution of two color
channels).
Quantile normalization may bring bias after adjustment, this is the
same as
the expression microarray normalization. If you would like to, please
send
me the plot produced by plotColorBias2D of this sample. Also, I will
add
more detailed description of this in the vignette.
Thanks for reporting this!
Pan
On 12/20/10 7:06 PM, "Lavinia Gordon" <lavinia.gordon at="" mcri.edu.au="">
wrote:
> Dear Dr Du
>
> I am a big fan of /lumi/ and was delighted to see that you have made
it
> compatible with methylation arrays. I have used these new functions
on
> several of my datasets and am very happy with the alternative method
of
> working with M values. I just have one query regarding the colour
> adjustment.
>
> So, for example, probe A is a red probe, and has a (GenomeStudio)
> unmethylated intensity of 2205 and a methylated intensity of 2822.
> 2822/(2822+2205)
> beta = 0.5613686
> After colour adjustment, it has an unmethylated intensity of
1718.882
> and a methylated intensity of 2576.6539:
> 2576.6539/(2576.6539+1718.882)
> beta = 0.5998446
>
> Why, if the methylated is the same colour as the unmethylated, has
the
> unmethylated intensity decreased by 23% but the methylated by only
9%?
>
> with thanks for your time,
>
> Lavinia Gordon.