Example data – MALDI-TOF Peptide intensity vs m/z Previous Lecture: Proteomics Informatics.
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Transcript of Example data – MALDI-TOF Peptide intensity vs m/z Previous Lecture: Proteomics Informatics.
Example data – MALDI-TOF
m/z1000 4500
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D:\Users\Fenyo\Desktop\ATP.txt (15:42 02/03/11)Description: none available m/z2280 2400
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D:\Users\Fenyo\Desktop\ATP.txt (15:46 02/03/11)Description: none available
m/z1300 1460
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D:\Users\Fenyo\Desktop\ATP.txt (15:50 02/03/11)Description: none available
m/z1444.0 1458.0
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D:\Users\Fenyo\Desktop\ATP.txt (15:54 02/03/11)Description: none available
m/z2378.0 2394.0
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D:\Users\Fenyo\Desktop\ATP.txt (16:07 02/03/11)Description: none available
Peptide intensity vs m/z
Previous Lecture: Proteomics Informatics
Gene Expression Analysis (I)
This Lecture
Learning Objectives
• Microarray experimental details• Microarray data formats• QC analysis and data exploration• Normalization• Differential expression• Functional enrichment• Databases
proteinRNADNAtranscription translation
replication
The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
DNA is transcribed into RNA which is then translated into protein
Measured by Microarray
What is a Microarray
• A simple concept: Dot Blot + Northern • Reverse the hybridization - put the probes
on the filter and label the bulk RNA • Make probes for lots of genes - a massively
parallel experiment• Make it tiny so you don’t need so much
RNA from your experimental cells.• Make quantitative measurements
Microarrays are Popular
At NYU Med Center we are now collecting about 3 GB of microarray data per week (60 chips, 6-10 different experiments)
PubMed search "microarray"= 13,948 papers
2005 = 44062004 = 35092003 = 24212002 = 15572001 = 8342000 = 294 294
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A Filter Array
DNA Chip Microarrays• Put a large number (~100K) of cDNA sequences or
synthetic DNA oligomers onto a glass slide (or other subtrate) in known locations on a grid.
• Label an RNA sample and hybridize • Measure amounts of RNA bound to each square in
the grid• Make comparisons
– Cancerous vs. normal tissue– Treated vs. untreated– Time course
• Many applications in both basic and clinical research
cDNA Microarray Technologies
• Spot cloned cDNAs onto a glass microscope slide– usually PCR amplified segments of plasmids
• Label 2 RNA samples with 2 different colors of flourescent dye - control vs. experimental
• Mix two labeled RNAs and hybridize to the chip
• Make two scans - one for each color• Combine the images to calculate ratios of
amounts of each RNA that bind to each spot
Spot your own Chip (plans available for free from Pat Brown’s website)
Robot spotter
Ordinary glass microscope slide
Combine scans for Red & Green
False color image is made from digitized fluorescence data, not by superimposing scanned images
cDNA Spotted Microarrays
Data Acquisition
• Scan the arrays• Quantitate each spot• Subtract background• Normalize• Export a table of fluorescent intensities
for each gene in the array
Affymetrix “Gene chip” system
• Uses 25 base oligos synthesized in place on a chip (20 pairs of oligos for each gene)
• RNA labeled and scanned in a single “color”– one sample per chip
• Can have as many as 20,000 genes on a chip• Arrays get smaller every year (more genes)• Chips are expensive• Proprietary system: “black box” software,
can only use their chips
Affymetrix Gene Chip
Affymetrix Technology
Affymetrix Software• Affymetrix System is totally automated• Computes a single value for each gene from 40
probes - (using surprisingly kludgy math)• Highly reproducible
(re-scan of same chip or hyb. of duplicate chips with same labeled sample gives very similar results)
• Incorporates false results due to image artefacts– dust, bubbles– pixel spillover from bright spot to neighboring dark
spots
Affymetrix Pivot Tablenormal tumor tumor normal normal tumor
ID_REF VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL
AFFX-BioB-5_at 210.6 P 234.6 P 362.5 P 389 P 305.6 P 330.5 PAFFX-BioB-M_at 393 P 327.8 P 501.4 P 816.5 P 542 P 440.8 PAFFX-BioB-3_at 264.9 P 164.6 P 244.7 P 379.7 P 261.3 P 303.7 PAFFX-BioC-5_at 738.6 P 676.1 P 737.6 P 1191.2 P 917 P 767.9 PAFFX-BioC-3_at 356.3 P 365.9 P 423.4 P 711.6 P 560.3 P 484.9 PAFFX-BioDn-5_at 566.3 P 442.2 P 649.7 P 834.3 P 599.1 P 606.9 PAFFX-BioDn-3_at 3911.8 P 3703.7 P 4680.9 P 6037.7 P 4653.7 P 4232 PAFFX-CreX-5_at 6433.3 P 5980 P 7734.7 P 10591 P 8162.1 P 8428 PAFFX-CreX-3_at 11917.8 P 9376.7 P 11509.3 P 16814.4 P 13861.8 P 13653.4 PAFFX-DapX-5_at 12.2 A 44.3 M 31.2 A 37.7 P 33.3 A 12.8 AAFFX-DapX-M_at 57.8 M 42.5 A 79 M 48.8 P 39.5 A 39.2 AAFFX-DapX-3_at 29.8 A 6.2 A 23.4 A 28.4 A 3.2 A 7.6 AAFFX-LysX-5_at 15.3 A 16.2 A 15.6 A 16.7 A 3.1 A 3.9 AAFFX-LysX-M_at 33.2 A 12 A 17.7 A 37.3 A 49.2 A 9.1 AAFFX-LysX-3_at 40.7 M 10.7 A 36.2 A 22.1 A 22.8 A 28.2 AAFFX-PheX-5_at 7.8 A 3 A 7.6 A 5.6 A 5 A 6.4 AAFFX-PheX-M_at 4.2 A 4.8 A 6.8 A 6.1 A 3.7 A 5.5 AAFFX-PheX-3_at 54.2 A 39.6 A 19.4 A 16.1 A 44.7 A 31.2 AAFFX-ThrX-5_at 8.2 A 11.2 A 13.2 A 9.5 A 8.5 A 7.5 AAFFX-ThrX-M_at 38.1 A 30.6 A 37.6 A 7.2 A 26.9 A 36.3 AAFFX-ThrX-3_at 15.2 A 5 A 15 A 8.3 A 36.8 A 11.5 AAFFX-TrpnX-5_at 11.2 A 11.8 A 22.2 A 22.1 A 8.9 A 35.6 AAFFX-TrpnX-M_at 9 A 8.1 A 9.1 A 8.7 A 8.1 A 12 AAFFX-TrpnX-3_at 19.8 A 12.8 A 11.8 A 43.2 M 17.4 A 10 AAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_5_at 82.7 P 120.7 P 92.7 P 46.4 P 55.9 P 46.5 PAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_MA_at 397.6 P 416.7 P 244.8 A 181.4 A 197.5 A 192.3 AAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_MB_at 206.2 P 303 P 300.8 P 253.5 P 195.3 P 216 PAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_3_at 663.8 P 723.9 P 812.1 P 666.1 P 629.4 P 754.1 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_5_at 547.6 P 405.9 P 6894.7 P 3496.1 P 1958.5 P 5799.4 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_M_at 239.1 P 175.8 P 3675 P 1348.6 P 695.9 P 2428.2 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_3_at 1236.4 P 721.4 P 9076.1 P 7795.9 P 4237.1 P 7890 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_5_at 19508 P 19267.1 P 22892 P 26584 P 29666.6 P 25038.1 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_M_at 18996.6 P 20610.4 P 21573.7 P 29936 P 30106.6 P 22380.2 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_3_at 18016.4 P 17463.8 P 20921.3 P 26908.3 P 28382.2 P 21885 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_5_at 23294.6 P 21783.7 P 18423.3 P 21858.9 P 23517.1 P 19450.3 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_M_at 25373.1 P 24922.8 P 22384.2 P 25760.2 P 27718.5 P 21401.6 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_3_at 20032.8 P 20251.1 P 20961.7 P 23494.6 P 23381.2 P 21173.3 P
Plot of raw data (PM probes)
Plot of log2 data (PM probes)
MA plot: log of fold change (M) vs log of Intensity (A)
Hypox1 vs
Hypox2 Hypox3 Norm1 Norm2 Norm3
M = log2 (A/B)A = ½ log2 (A*B) = ½ (log2 (A) + log2 (B))
Goals of a Microarray Experiment
1. Find the genes that change expression between experimental and control samples
2. Classify samples based on a gene expression profile
3. Find patterns: Groups of biologically related genes that change expression together across samples/treatments
Basic Data Analysis• Fold change (relative increase or decrease in
intensity for each gene)• Set cutoff filter for low values
(background +noise)• Cluster genes by similar changes - only really
meaningful across multiple treatments or time points
• Cluster samples by similar gene expression profiles
Streamlined Affy Analysis
Normalize
normal tumor tumor normal normal tumorID_REF VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL VALUE ABS_CALL
AFFX-BioB-5_at 210.6 P 234.6 P 362.5 P 389 P 305.6 P 330.5 PAFFX-BioB-M_at 393 P 327.8 P 501.4 P 816.5 P 542 P 440.8 PAFFX-BioB-3_at 264.9 P 164.6 P 244.7 P 379.7 P 261.3 P 303.7 PAFFX-BioC-5_at 738.6 P 676.1 P 737.6 P 1191.2 P 917 P 767.9 PAFFX-BioC-3_at 356.3 P 365.9 P 423.4 P 711.6 P 560.3 P 484.9 PAFFX-BioDn-5_at 566.3 P 442.2 P 649.7 P 834.3 P 599.1 P 606.9 PAFFX-BioDn-3_at 3911.8 P 3703.7 P 4680.9 P 6037.7 P 4653.7 P 4232 PAFFX-CreX-5_at 6433.3 P 5980 P 7734.7 P 10591 P 8162.1 P 8428 PAFFX-CreX-3_at 11917.8 P 9376.7 P 11509.3 P 16814.4 P 13861.8 P 13653.4 PAFFX-DapX-5_at 12.2 A 44.3 M 31.2 A 37.7 P 33.3 A 12.8 AAFFX-DapX-M_at 57.8 M 42.5 A 79 M 48.8 P 39.5 A 39.2 AAFFX-DapX-3_at 29.8 A 6.2 A 23.4 A 28.4 A 3.2 A 7.6 AAFFX-LysX-5_at 15.3 A 16.2 A 15.6 A 16.7 A 3.1 A 3.9 AAFFX-LysX-M_at 33.2 A 12 A 17.7 A 37.3 A 49.2 A 9.1 AAFFX-LysX-3_at 40.7 M 10.7 A 36.2 A 22.1 A 22.8 A 28.2 AAFFX-PheX-5_at 7.8 A 3 A 7.6 A 5.6 A 5 A 6.4 AAFFX-PheX-M_at 4.2 A 4.8 A 6.8 A 6.1 A 3.7 A 5.5 AAFFX-PheX-3_at 54.2 A 39.6 A 19.4 A 16.1 A 44.7 A 31.2 AAFFX-ThrX-5_at 8.2 A 11.2 A 13.2 A 9.5 A 8.5 A 7.5 AAFFX-ThrX-M_at 38.1 A 30.6 A 37.6 A 7.2 A 26.9 A 36.3 AAFFX-ThrX-3_at 15.2 A 5 A 15 A 8.3 A 36.8 A 11.5 AAFFX-TrpnX-5_at 11.2 A 11.8 A 22.2 A 22.1 A 8.9 A 35.6 AAFFX-TrpnX-M_at 9 A 8.1 A 9.1 A 8.7 A 8.1 A 12 AAFFX-TrpnX-3_at 19.8 A 12.8 A 11.8 A 43.2 M 17.4 A 10 AAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_5_at 82.7 P 120.7 P 92.7 P 46.4 P 55.9 P 46.5 PAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_MA_at 397.6 P 416.7 P 244.8 A 181.4 A 197.5 A 192.3 AAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_MB_at 206.2 P 303 P 300.8 P 253.5 P 195.3 P 216 PAFFX-HUMISGF3A/M97935_3_at 663.8 P 723.9 P 812.1 P 666.1 P 629.4 P 754.1 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_5_at 547.6 P 405.9 P 6894.7 P 3496.1 P 1958.5 P 5799.4 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_M_at 239.1 P 175.8 P 3675 P 1348.6 P 695.9 P 2428.2 PAFFX-HUMRGE/M10098_3_at 1236.4 P 721.4 P 9076.1 P 7795.9 P 4237.1 P 7890 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_5_at 19508 P 19267.1 P 22892 P 26584 P 29666.6 P 25038.1 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_M_at 18996.6 P 20610.4 P 21573.7 P 29936 P 30106.6 P 22380.2 PAFFX-HUMGAPDH/M33197_3_at 18016.4 P 17463.8 P 20921.3 P 26908.3 P 28382.2 P 21885 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_5_at 23294.6 P 21783.7 P 18423.3 P 21858.9 P 23517.1 P 19450.3 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_M_at 25373.1 P 24922.8 P 22384.2 P 25760.2 P 27718.5 P 21401.6 PAFFX-HSAC07/X00351_3_at 20032.8 P 20251.1 P 20961.7 P 23494.6 P 23381.2 P 21173.3 P
Raw data Filter
ClassificationSignificance Clustering
Gene lists
Function(Genome Ontology)
(RMA)
•Present/Absent•Minimum value•Fold change
•t-test•SAM•Rank Product
•PAM•Machine learning
Scatter plot of all genes in a simple comparison of two control (A) and two treatments (B: high vs. low glucose) showing changes in expression greater than 2.2 and 3 fold.
Thomas Hudson, Montreal Genome Center
Normalization• Can control for many of the experimental
sources of variability (systematic, not random or gene specific)
• Bring each image to the same average brightness
• Can use simple math or fancy - – divide by the mean (whole chip or by sectors)– LOESS (locally weighted regression)
• No sure biological standards
RMA• Robust Multichip Average• Bolstad, B.M., Irizarry R. A., Astrand, M., and Speed, T.P. (2003), A Comparison of
Normalization Methods for High Density Oligonucleotide Array Data Based on Bias and Variance. Bioinformatics 19(2):185-193
log(medpol(PMij − BG)) = µ i + α j + e ijfor (array i, probe j)
Are the Treatments Different?• Analysis of microarray data has tended to focus on
making lists of genes that are up or down regulated between treatments
• Before making these lists, ask the question:"Are the treatments different?"
• PCA/MDS or cluster the samples• If the treatment is responsible for differences, then
use statistical methods to find the genes most responsible
• If there are not significant overall differences, then lists of genes with large fold changes may only reflect random variability.
Statistics• When you have variability in
measurements, you need replication and statistics to find real differences
• It’s not just the genes with 2 fold increase, but those with a significant p-value across replicates
• Non-parametric (i.e. rank or permutation) or paired value statistics may be more appropriate (low number of samples, high standard deviation)
Multiple Comparisons
• In a microarray experiment, each gene (each probe or probe set) is really a separate experiment
• Yet if you treat each gene as an independent comparison, you will always find some with significant differences– (the tails of a normal distribution)
• Different genes are NOT independent
False Discovery• Statisticians call false positives a "type 1 error" or a
"False Discovery"• The FDR must be smaller than the number of real
differences that you find - which in turn depends on the size of the differences and variability of the measured expression values
• You can’t know the true false discovery rate for your data, but it can be estimated in a number of different ways.
• In biology we tend to be comfortable with an estimated FDR of 5-10%
SAMSignificance Analysis of MicroarraysTusher, Tibshirani and Chu (2001): Significance analysis of microarrays applied to the ionizing radiation response. PNAS 2001 98: 5116-5121, (Apr 24).
• R package, Excel plugin• Free• Permutation based• Most published method of
microarray data analysis
40
SAM- procedure overviewSample genes
expression
scale
Define and calculate a statistic, d(i)
Generate permutatedsamples
Estimate attributes of d(i)’s distribution
Identify potentiallySignificant genes
Estimate FDR
ChooseΔ
• Calculate “relative difference” – a value that incorporates the change in expression between conditions and the variation of measurements in each condition
• Calculate “expected relative difference” – derived from controls generated by permutations of data
• Plot against each other, set cutoff to identify deviating genes
• Calculate FDR for chosen cutoff from the control permutations
d(i) x I (i) x U (i)
s(i) s0
Relative Difference
)(),( ixix UIMean expression of gene i in conditions I and U
s(i) Gene-specific scatter
s0 Constant to reduce variation of low expressed genes
Permutation tests
i) For each gene, compute the d-value (similar to a t-statistic). This is the observed d-value (di) for that gene.
ii) Randomly shuffle the expression values between groups A and B. Compute the d-value for each randomized set.
iii) Take the average of the randomized d-values for each gene. This is the ‘expected relative difference’ (dE) of that gene. Difference between (di) and (deE) is used to measure significance.
iv) Plot d(i) vs. dE(i) v) Calculate FDR = average number of genes that exceed in the permuted data.
Exp 1 Exp 2 Exp 3 Exp 4Exp 5 Exp 6
Gene 1
Group A Group B
Exp 1Exp 4 Exp 5Exp 2Exp 3 Exp 6
Gene 1
Group A Group B
Original grouping
Randomized grouping
SAM Two-Class Unpaired
)()( idid E
SAM Two-Class Unpaired
Significant positive genes (i.e., mean expression of group B >
mean expression of group A)
Significant negative genes (i.e., mean expression of group A > mean expression of group B)
“Observed d = expected d” line
The more a gene deviates from the “observed = expected” line, the more likely it is to be significant. Any gene beyond the first gene in the +ve or –ve direction on the x-axis (including the first gene), whose observed exceeds the expected by at least delta, is considered significant.
• Plot d(i) vs. dE(i)• For most of the
genes:
)()( idid E
Higher LevelMicroarray data analysis
• Clustering and pattern detection• Data mining and visualization• Controls and normalization of results• Statistical validatation• Linkage between gene expression data and gene
sequence/function/metabolic pathways databases• Discovery of common sequences in co-regulated
genes• Meta-studies using data from multiple
experiments
Types of Clustering
• Herarchical– Link similar genes, build up to a tree of all
• Self Organizing Maps (SOM)– Split all genes into similar sub-groups– Finds its own groups (machine learning)
• Principle Component– every gene is a dimension (vector), find a single
dimension that best represents the differences in the data
Cluster by fold change
GeneSpring
SOM Clusters
Classification
How to sort samples into two classes based on gene expression data
Cancer vs. normalCancer sub-types
(benign vs. malignant)Responds well to drug vs. poor
response (i.e. tamoxifen for breast cancer)
PAM: Prediction Analysis for MicroarraysClass Prediction and Survival Analysis for Genomic Expression Data MiningPerforms sample classification from gene expression data,via "nearest shrunken centroid method'' of Tibshirani, Hastie, Narasimhan and Chu (2002): "Diagnosis of multiple cancer types by shrunken centroids of gene expression" PNAS 2002 99:6567-6572 (May 14).
BioConductorAll of these normalization, statistical,
and clustering methods are available in a free software package called BioConductor, which is part of the R statistical environmentwww.bioconductor.org
command line interface
> data(SpikeIn)> pms <- pm(SpikeIn)> mms <- mm(SpikeIn)> par(mfrow = c(1, 2))> concentrations <- matrix(as.numeric(sampleNames(SpikeIn)), 20,+ 12, byrow = TRUE)> matplot(concentrations, pms, log = "xy", main = "PM", ylim = c(30,+ 20000))> lines(concentrations[1, ], apply(pms, 2, mean), lwd = 3)> matplot(concentrations, mms, log = "xy", main = "MM", ylim = c(30,+ 20000))> lines(concentrations[1, ], apply(mms, 2, mean), lwd = 3)
Functional Genomics
Take a list of "interesting" genes and find their biological relationshipsGene lists may come from
significance/classfication analysis of microarrays, proteomics, or other high-throughput methods
Requires a reference set of "biological knowledge"
Genome Ontology
How to organize biological knowledge?Biologists work on a variety of
different research organisms: yeast, fruit fly, mouse, … human
the same gene can have very different functions (antennapedia)
and very different names (sonic hedgehog…)
GO
Biologists got together and developed a sensible system called Genome Ontology (GO)
3 hierarchical sets of terminologyBiological ProcessCellular Component (location within
cell)Molecular Function
about 1000 categories of functions
List (and convert) gene identifiers from many genomic resources including NCBI, PIR and Uniprot/SwissProt as well as Illumina and Affymetrix gene IDs
Gene IDs matched to GO function annotations (for human)
Test for enrichment of GO categories (or KEGG pathways, disease associations, etc.) in list.
Groups significant categories into clusters
DAVID uses a modified Fishers Exact text to get p-values for enrichment.
Basic idea: is enrichment of this category in this list greater than frequency of the category in the genome.
DAVID enrichment score: EASE
A Hypothetical Example: In human genome background (20,000 gene total), 40 genes are involved in p53 signaling pathway. A given gene list has found that 3 out of 300 belong to p53 signaling pathway. Then we ask the question if 3/300 is more than random chance comparing to the human background of 40/20000.
Fisher Exact P-Value = 0.008. However, EASE Score is more conservative. EASE Score = 0.06 (using 3-1 instead of 3). Since P-Value > 0.01, this user gene list is specifically associated (enriched) in p53 signaling pathway no more than random chance
Microarray Databases
• Large experiments may have hundreds of individual array hybridizations
• Core lab at an institution or multiple investigators using one machine - data archive and validate across experiments
• Data-mining - look for similar patterns of gene expression across different experiments
Public Databases
• Gene Expression data is an essential aspect of annotating the genome
• Publication and data exchange for microarray experiments
• Data mining/Meta-studies• Common data format - XML• MIAME (Minimal Information About a
Microarray Experiment)
Array Express at EMBL
GEO at the NCBI
Sumary
• Microarray experimental details• Microarray data formats• QC analysis and data exploration• Normalization• Differential expression• Functional enrichment• Databases
Next Lecture: Next Generation Sequencing Informatics