Entering edit mode
Christian De Santis
▴
150
@christian-de-santis-6143
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Dear List,
I have data from a nutritional microarray experiment with 5 treatments
where one component of the diet is varying in different proportions.
I have visually identified some genes that in my opinion share a
common and possibly interesting trend. However, I was wondering if it
exists a way to model this trend and extract other genes from the list
that fit this trend. It is not necessarily a linear increase or
decrease of expression (I know how to do that in Limma).
Perhaps anyone is aware of any functions of existing packages that can
perform such a task? Thanks very much for your help, as usual!
Best Regards,
Christian De Santis
Institute of Aquaculture
University of Stirling
Stirling FK9 4LA
Scotland, U.K.
Tel: +44 1786 467993
E-mail: Christian.desantis at stir.ac.uk<mailto:christian.desantis at="" stir.ac.uk="">
<http: uk.linkedin.com="" pub="" christian-de-santis="" 59="" 5a8="" 91="">
--
The University of Stirling has been ranked in the top 12 of UK
universities for graduate employment*.
94% of our 2012 graduates were in work and/or further study within six
months of graduation.
*The Telegraph
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number
SC 011159.