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Evaluation of different normalization and analysis procedures for Illumina gene expression microarray data involving small changes

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posted on 2025-05-10, 12:58 authored by Daniel JohnstoneDaniel Johnstone, Ricardo RiverosRicardo Riveros, Moones Heidari, Ross M. Graham, Debbie Trinder, Regina BerrettaRegina Berretta, John K. Olynyk, Rodney ScottRodney Scott, Pablo MoscatoPablo Moscato, Elizabeth A. Milward
While Illumina microarrays can be used successfully for detecting small gene expression changes due to their high degree of technical replicability, there is little information on how different normalization and differential expression analysis strategies affect outcomes. To evaluate this, we assessed concordance across gene lists generated by applying different combinations of normalization strategy and analytical approach to two Illumina datasets with modest expression changes. In addition to using traditional statistical approaches, we also tested an approach based on combinatorial optimization. We found that the choice of both normalization strategy and analytical approach considerably affected outcomes, in some cases leading to substantial differences in gene lists and subsequent pathway analysis results. Our findings suggest that important biological phenomena may be overlooked when there is a routine practice of using only one approach to investigate all microarray datasets. Analytical artefacts of this kind are likely to be especially relevant for datasets involving small fold changes, where inherent technical variation—if not adequately minimized by effective normalization—may overshadow true biological variation. This report provides some basic guidelines for optimizing outcomes when working with Illumina datasets involving small expression changes.

History

Journal title

Microarrays

Volume

2

Issue

2

Pagination

131-152

Publisher

MDPI AG

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

Rights statement

© 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license.

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