Browsing by Subject "RNA-Sequencing"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Integrative analysis of high-throughput biological data: shrinkage correlation coefficient and comparative expression analysis(2009-12) Yao, Jianchao; Roux, Stanley J.; Chen, Zengjian J.; Markey, Mia K.; Miranker, Daniel P.; Fu, BoThe focus for this research is to develop and apply statistical methods to analyze and interpret high-throughput biological data. We developed a novel correlation coefficient, shrinkage correlation coefficient (SCC), that fully exploits the similarity between the replicated microarray experimental samples. The methodology considers both the number of replicates and the variance within each experimental group in clustering expression data, and provides a robust statistical estimation of the error of replicated microarray data. Applying SCC-based hierarchical clustering to the replicated microarray data obtained from germinating spores of the fern Ceratopteris richardii, we discovered two clusters of genes with shared expression patterns during spore germination. This computational approach is not only applicable to DNA microarray analysis but is also applicable to proteomics data or any other high-throughput analysis methodology. The suppression of APY1 and APY2 in mutants expressing an inducible RNAi system resulted in plants with a dwarf phenotype and disrupted auxin distribution, and we used these mutants to discover what genes changed expression during growth suppression. We evaluated the gene expression changes of apyrase-suppressed RNAi mutants that had been grown in the light and in the darkness, using the NimbleGen Arabidopsis thaliana 4-Plex microarray, respectively. We compared the two sets of large-scale expression data and identified genes whose expression significantly changed after apyrase suppression in light and darkness, respectively. Our results allowed us to highlight some of the genes likely to play major roles in mediating the growth changes that happen when plants drastically reduce their production of APY1 and APY2, some more associated with growth promotion and others, such as stress-induced genes, more associated with growth inhibition. There is a strong rationale for ranking all these genes as prime candidates for mediating the inhibitory growth effects of suppressing apyrase expression, thus the NimbleGen data will serve as a catalyst and valuable guide to the subsequent physiological and molecular experiments that will be needed to clarify the network of gene expression changes that accompany growth inhibition.