maSigPro: a method to identify significantly differential expression profiles in time-course microarray experiments

A Conesa, MJ Nueda, A Ferrer, M Talón - Bioinformatics, 2006 - academic.oup.com
Bioinformatics, 2006academic.oup.com
Motivation: Multi-series time-course microarray experiments are useful approaches for
exploring biological processes. In this type of experiments, the researcher is frequently
interested in studying gene expression changes along time and in evaluating trend
differences between the various experimental groups. The large amount of data, multiplicity
of experimental conditions and the dynamic nature of the experiments poses great
challenges to data analysis. Results: In this work, we propose a statistical procedure to …
Abstract
Motivation: Multi-series time-course microarray experiments are useful approaches for exploring biological processes. In this type of experiments, the researcher is frequently interested in studying gene expression changes along time and in evaluating trend differences between the various experimental groups. The large amount of data, multiplicity of experimental conditions and the dynamic nature of the experiments poses great challenges to data analysis.
Results: In this work, we propose a statistical procedure to identify genes that show different gene expression profiles across analytical groups in time-course experiments. The method is a two-regression step approach where the experimental groups are identified by dummy variables. The procedure first adjusts a global regression model with all the defined variables to identify differentially expressed genes, and in second a variable selection strategy is applied to study differences between groups and to find statistically significant different profiles. The methodology is illustrated on both a real and a simulated microarray dataset.
Availability: The method has been implemented in the statistical language R and is freely available from the Bioconductor contributed packages repository and from
Contact:  aconesa@ivia.es; mj.nueda@ua.es
Oxford University Press