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Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.

Several studies using microarrays have shown that changes in gene expression provide information about the mechanism of toxicity induced by xenobiotic agents. Nevertheless, the issue of whether gene expression profiles are reproducible across different laboratories remains to be determined. To addre...

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Autores principales: Waring, Jeffrey F, Ulrich, Roger G, Flint, Nick, Morfitt, David, Kalkuhl, Arno, Staedtler, Frank, Lawton, Michael, Beekman, Johanna M, Suter, Laura
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15033593
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author Waring, Jeffrey F
Ulrich, Roger G
Flint, Nick
Morfitt, David
Kalkuhl, Arno
Staedtler, Frank
Lawton, Michael
Beekman, Johanna M
Suter, Laura
author_facet Waring, Jeffrey F
Ulrich, Roger G
Flint, Nick
Morfitt, David
Kalkuhl, Arno
Staedtler, Frank
Lawton, Michael
Beekman, Johanna M
Suter, Laura
author_sort Waring, Jeffrey F
collection PubMed
description Several studies using microarrays have shown that changes in gene expression provide information about the mechanism of toxicity induced by xenobiotic agents. Nevertheless, the issue of whether gene expression profiles are reproducible across different laboratories remains to be determined. To address this question, several members of the Hepatotoxicity Working Group of the International Life Sciences Institute Health and Environmental Sciences Institute evaluated the liver gene expression profiles of rats treated with methapyrilene (MP). Animals were treated at one facility, and RNA was distributed to five different sites for gene expression analysis. A preliminary evaluation of the number of modulated genes uncovered striking differences between the five different sites. However, additional data analysis demonstrated that these differences had an effect on the absolute gene expression results but not on the outcome of the study. For all users, unsupervised algorithms showed that gene expression allows the distinction of the high dose of MP from controls and low dose. In addition, the use of a supervised analysis method (support vector machines) made it possible to correctly classify samples. In conclusion, the results show that, despite some variability, robust gene expression changes were consistent between sites. In addition, key expression changes related to the mechanism of MP-induced hepatotoxicity were identified. These results provide critical information regarding the consistency of microarray results across different laboratories and shed light on the strengths and limitations of expression profiling in drug safety analysis.
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spelling pubmed-12418972005-11-08 Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene. Waring, Jeffrey F Ulrich, Roger G Flint, Nick Morfitt, David Kalkuhl, Arno Staedtler, Frank Lawton, Michael Beekman, Johanna M Suter, Laura Environ Health Perspect Research Article Several studies using microarrays have shown that changes in gene expression provide information about the mechanism of toxicity induced by xenobiotic agents. Nevertheless, the issue of whether gene expression profiles are reproducible across different laboratories remains to be determined. To address this question, several members of the Hepatotoxicity Working Group of the International Life Sciences Institute Health and Environmental Sciences Institute evaluated the liver gene expression profiles of rats treated with methapyrilene (MP). Animals were treated at one facility, and RNA was distributed to five different sites for gene expression analysis. A preliminary evaluation of the number of modulated genes uncovered striking differences between the five different sites. However, additional data analysis demonstrated that these differences had an effect on the absolute gene expression results but not on the outcome of the study. For all users, unsupervised algorithms showed that gene expression allows the distinction of the high dose of MP from controls and low dose. In addition, the use of a supervised analysis method (support vector machines) made it possible to correctly classify samples. In conclusion, the results show that, despite some variability, robust gene expression changes were consistent between sites. In addition, key expression changes related to the mechanism of MP-induced hepatotoxicity were identified. These results provide critical information regarding the consistency of microarray results across different laboratories and shed light on the strengths and limitations of expression profiling in drug safety analysis. 2004-03 /pmc/articles/PMC1241897/ /pubmed/15033593 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Waring, Jeffrey F
Ulrich, Roger G
Flint, Nick
Morfitt, David
Kalkuhl, Arno
Staedtler, Frank
Lawton, Michael
Beekman, Johanna M
Suter, Laura
Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title_full Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title_fullStr Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title_full_unstemmed Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title_short Interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
title_sort interlaboratory evaluation of rat hepatic gene expression changes induced by methapyrilene.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15033593
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