Relationship between gene expression and observed intensities in DNA microarrays - A modeling study

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Abstract

A theoretical study of the physical properties which determine the variation in signal strength from probe to probe on a microarray is presented. A model which incorporates probe-target hybridization, as well as the subsequent dissociation which occurs during stringent washing of the microarray, is introduced and shown to reasonably describe publicly available spike-in experiments carried out at Affymetrix. In particular, this model suggests that probe-target dissociation during the stringent wash plays a critical role in determining the observed hybridization intensities. In addition, it is demonstrated that non-specific hybridization introduces uncertainties which significantly limit the ability of any model to accurately quantify absolute gene expression levels while, in contrast, target folding appears to have little effect on these results. Finally, for data from target spike-in experiments, our model is shown to compare favorably with an existing statistical model in determining target concentration levels. © 2006 Oxford University Press.

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Held, G. A., Grinstein, G., & Tu, Y. (2006). Relationship between gene expression and observed intensities in DNA microarrays - A modeling study. Nucleic Acids Research, 34(9). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl122

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