charts

Publications

Publication details

Analysis of matched mRNA measurements from two different microarray technologies
Journal Article
Reference:
W. P. Kuo, T. Jenssen, A. J. Butte, L. Ohno-Machado, I. S. Kohane. Bioinformatics, 18, 3, 405-12. Published in 2002.
Abstract:

Motivation: The existence of several technologies for
measuring gene expression makes the question of crosstechnology
agreement of measurements an important
issue. Cross-platform utilization of data from different technologies
has the potential to reduce the need to duplicate
experiments but requires corresponding measurements to
be comparable.
Methods: A comparison of mRNA measurements of
2895 sequence-matched genes in 56 cell lines from
the standard panel of 60 cancer cell lines from the
National Cancer Institute (NCI 60) was carried out by
calculating correlation between matched measurements
and calculating concordance between cluster from two
high-throughput DNA microarray technologies, Stanford
type cDNA microarrays and Affymetrix oligonucleotide
microarrays.
Results: In general, corresponding measurements from
the two platforms showed poor correlation. Clusters of
genes and cell lines were discordant between the two
technologies, suggesting that relative intra-technology
relationships were not preserved. GC-content, sequence
length, average signal intensity, and an estimator of
cross-hybridization were found to be associated with the
degree of correlation. This suggests gene-specific, or more
correctly probe-specific, factors influencing measurements
differently in the two platforms, implying a poor prognosis
for a broad utilization of gene expression measurements
across platforms.
Contact: wpkuo@mit.edu

Full PDF version available here
Back to Search Results
 
Information last updated: Tue Jun 19 2007
Make Corrections to this Publication
Stanford School of Medicine