Intensity-based analysis of two-colour microarrays enables efficient and flexible hybridization designs.

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Abstract

In two-colour microarrays, the ratio of signal intensities of two co-hybridized samples is used as a relative measure of gene expression. Ratio-based analysis becomes complicated and inefficient in multi-class comparisons. We therefore investigated the validity of an intensity-based analysis procedure. To this end, two different cRNA targets were hybridized together, separately, with a common reference and in a self-self fashion on spotted 65mer oligonucleotide microarrays. We found that the signal intensity of the cRNA targets was not influenced by the presence of a target labelled in the opposite colour. This indicates that targets do not compete for binding sites on the array, which is essential for intensity-based analysis. It is demonstrated that, for good-quality arrays, the correlation of signal intensity measurements between the different hybridization designs is high (R > 0.9). Furthermore, ratio calculations from ratio- and intensity-based analyses correlated well (R > 0.8). Based on these results, we advocate the use of separate intensities rather than ratios in the analysis of two-colour long-oligonucleotide microarrays. Intensity-based analysis makes microarray experiments more efficient and more flexible: It allows for direct comparisons between all hybridized samples, while circumventing the need for a reference sample that occupies half of the hybridization capacity.

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’t Hoen, P. A. C., Turk, R., Boer, J. M., Sterrenburg, E., de Menezes, R. X., van Ommen, G. J. B., & den Dunnen, J. T. (2004). Intensity-based analysis of two-colour microarrays enables efficient and flexible hybridization designs. Nucleic Acids Research, 32(4). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gnh038

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