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Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance

BACKGROUND: The maturing of gene expression microarray technology and interest in the use of microarray-based applications for clinical and diagnostic applications calls for quantitative measures of quality. This manuscript presents a retrospective study characterizing several approaches to assess t...

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Autores principales: Lippa, Katrice A, Duewer, David L, Salit, Marc L, Game, Laurence, Causton, Helen C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3020182/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21189145
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-3-349
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author Lippa, Katrice A
Duewer, David L
Salit, Marc L
Game, Laurence
Causton, Helen C
author_facet Lippa, Katrice A
Duewer, David L
Salit, Marc L
Game, Laurence
Causton, Helen C
author_sort Lippa, Katrice A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The maturing of gene expression microarray technology and interest in the use of microarray-based applications for clinical and diagnostic applications calls for quantitative measures of quality. This manuscript presents a retrospective study characterizing several approaches to assess technical performance of microarray data measured on the Affymetrix GeneChip platform, including whole-array metrics and information from a standard mixture of external spike-in and endogenous internal controls. Spike-in controls were found to carry the same information about technical performance as whole-array metrics and endogenous "housekeeping" genes. These results support the use of spike-in controls as general tools for performance assessment across time, experimenters and array batches, suggesting that they have potential for comparison of microarray data generated across species using different technologies. RESULTS: A layered PCA modeling methodology that uses data from a number of classes of controls (spike-in hybridization, spike-in polyA+, internal RNA degradation, endogenous or "housekeeping genes") was used for the assessment of microarray data quality. The controls provide information on multiple stages of the experimental protocol (e.g., hybridization, RNA amplification). External spike-in, hybridization and RNA labeling controls provide information related to both assay and hybridization performance whereas internal endogenous controls provide quality information on the biological sample. We find that the variance of the data generated from the external and internal controls carries critical information about technical performance; the PCA dissection of this variance is consistent with whole-array quality assessment based on a number of quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) metrics. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide support for the use of both external and internal RNA control data to assess the technical quality of microarray experiments. The observed consistency amongst the information carried by internal and external controls and whole-array quality measures offers promise for rationally-designed control standards for routine performance monitoring of multiplexed measurement platforms.
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spelling pubmed-30201822011-01-13 Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance Lippa, Katrice A Duewer, David L Salit, Marc L Game, Laurence Causton, Helen C BMC Res Notes Research Article BACKGROUND: The maturing of gene expression microarray technology and interest in the use of microarray-based applications for clinical and diagnostic applications calls for quantitative measures of quality. This manuscript presents a retrospective study characterizing several approaches to assess technical performance of microarray data measured on the Affymetrix GeneChip platform, including whole-array metrics and information from a standard mixture of external spike-in and endogenous internal controls. Spike-in controls were found to carry the same information about technical performance as whole-array metrics and endogenous "housekeeping" genes. These results support the use of spike-in controls as general tools for performance assessment across time, experimenters and array batches, suggesting that they have potential for comparison of microarray data generated across species using different technologies. RESULTS: A layered PCA modeling methodology that uses data from a number of classes of controls (spike-in hybridization, spike-in polyA+, internal RNA degradation, endogenous or "housekeeping genes") was used for the assessment of microarray data quality. The controls provide information on multiple stages of the experimental protocol (e.g., hybridization, RNA amplification). External spike-in, hybridization and RNA labeling controls provide information related to both assay and hybridization performance whereas internal endogenous controls provide quality information on the biological sample. We find that the variance of the data generated from the external and internal controls carries critical information about technical performance; the PCA dissection of this variance is consistent with whole-array quality assessment based on a number of quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) metrics. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide support for the use of both external and internal RNA control data to assess the technical quality of microarray experiments. The observed consistency amongst the information carried by internal and external controls and whole-array quality measures offers promise for rationally-designed control standards for routine performance monitoring of multiplexed measurement platforms. BioMed Central 2010-12-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3020182/ /pubmed/21189145 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-3-349 Text en Copyright ©2010 Lippa et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (<url>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0</url>), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lippa, Katrice A
Duewer, David L
Salit, Marc L
Game, Laurence
Causton, Helen C
Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title_full Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title_fullStr Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title_short Exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
title_sort exploring the use of internal and externalcontrols for assessing microarray technical performance
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3020182/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21189145
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-3-349
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