General statistical question 2 colour data
0
0
Entering edit mode
@aeschiellumcnl-1083
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Dear all, I have some basic statistical questions and which packages might provide tools to answer those. I am running R 2.0.1 + Bioconductor under Debian testing. I did have a look at the archives but did not find any satisfying answers (or I didn't search the right way) and since I have only a limited statistical background I need some pointers/help. 1. I have 4 sets of mice (wt vs treated) that have been hybridized as random pairs to a total of 8 oligo arrays (each pair twice as a dye swap pair). Each array is spotted in duplo. I would like to not only identify genes that are differentially expressed between the two experimental groups (wt and treated) but I also want to extract the effect of the treatment from the mouse individual effect of each mouse-pair(this effect could then be used as a factor in determining the required number of animals for a new experiment). I assume that each hybridisation will differ from the other pairs due to the mouse-(or patient-)effect. Is there an easy way to extract this information? Any hint to which package I should use or vignettes that discuss this issue would be greatly appreciated (if I know where to look for I usually get things running). 2. I do not have only on treatment but actually two treatments. The groups were hybridised in a loop design. I was told that I could only perform an ANOVA if I split the ratios (is this true?). I was also told this was dangerous business if I could not guarantee that the correlation between the individual green and red channels of each experimental group was "good" enough. My question is therefore, how can I check the correlation? Should I run a normalisation on the individual channels of each array or do I have to test the correlation on raw channel data (which differ quit a lot, hence the normalization, at least thats what I thought). What is a good correlation anyhow? Our Oligo-arrays are printed on home made slides, so quality is always an issue, where do I have to draw a line? And, if I have to work with ratios after all is there no other statistical approach to the loop design? I fear that these are very basic questions you probably get every now and then but I would greatly appreciate any help. Thanks, Anja -- Anja E. Schiel, Ph.D. Departments of General Internal Medicine and Human Genetics Leiden University Medical Center PO Box 9503 2300 RA Leiden The Netherlands tel: -31-(0)71-5276067 fax: -31-(0)71-5276075
Normalization oligo Normalization oligo • 833 views
ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 512 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6