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Lo w -Level Analysis of Affymetrix Data Mark Reimers National Cancer Institute Bethesda Maryland.

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Presentation on theme: "Lo w -Level Analysis of Affymetrix Data Mark Reimers National Cancer Institute Bethesda Maryland."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lo w -Level Analysis of Affymetrix Data Mark Reimers National Cancer Institute Bethesda Maryland

2 Overview the Affymetrix technology Normalization Relationships among probes in Combining Probe Information Quality Control

3 Affymetrix GeneChip ® Probe Arrays Single stranded, fluorescently labeled DNA target 20µm Each probe cell or feature contains millions of copies of a specific oligonucleotide probe Image of Hybridized Probe Array Image of Hybridized Probe Array Over 400,000 different probes complementary to genetic information of interest Oligonucleotide probe * * * * *1.28cm GeneChip Probe Array Hybridized Probe Cell

4 Affymetrix Probe Design Published Gene Sequence Multiple (11-20) 25-base oligonucleotide probes Perfect Match Mismatch5´3´ PM is exactly complementary to published sequence MM is changed on 13 th base

5 Affymetrix Image Reading About 100 pixels per probe cell Selects 16-25 brightest contiguous pixels Take average of selected pixels Variability in best pixels ~ 5-20% Image courtesy of Affymetrix

6 Normalization Approaches Simple: find average of each chip; divide all values by chip average MAS5: fit regression line relative to a reference chip Invariant set: find subset of probes in almost same rank order as in a reference chip Quantile normalization: fit to average quantiles across experiment Others: local loess, local regression.

7 Comparing Probes on Different Chips Plots of two Affymetrix chips against the experiment means

8 MAS 5.0 Normalization Plot probes from each chip against common base- line chip Fit regression line to middle 98% of probes This method fits the ends well, but seems to miss an important trend between 1500 and 4000

9 Invariant Set (Li-Wong) Method Select baseline chip X For each other chip Y: Select probes p 1, …, p K, (K ~ 10000), such that p 1 < p 2 < …< p K in both chips X and Y Fit running median through points { (x p1,y p1 ), …, (x pK, y pK ) } Subtract fitted value along running meidan from each y value

10 Quantile Method (part of RMA) Distributions of probe intensities vary substantially among replicate chips This cannot be even approximately resolved by any linear transformation Apply a non-linear transform, based on the idea that comparable quantiles of the probe distribution should have comparable values This doesn’t wipe out individual gene differences, although it compresses variation at the high end

11 Probe Intensities in 23 Replicates

12 Density function Cumulative Distribution Function Distribution of Chip Intensities Reference Distribution Formula: x norm = F 2 -1 (F 1 (x)) Quantile Normalization Assumes: gene distribution changes little xy  F 1 (x)F 2 (x)

13 After Normalization vs Before: intensity scale

14 Ratio-Intensity: Before

15 Ratio-Intensity: After

16 Quantile normalization.vs. normalization by scaling Quantile normalization works

17 Methods for computing expression Affymetrix MicroArray Suite: v.4, 5 –robust average of probes on one chip Linear Model (multi-chip) methods –dChip: Li and Wong –Bioconductor affy package (RMA) Bolstad, Irizarry, Speed, et al Many others published –Some based on thermodynamic considerations

18 Probe Variation Probes vary by two orders of magnitude on each chip Signal from 16 probes for the GAPDH gene on one chip Individual probes don’t agree on fold changes across chips -Bright probes more often, but not always, more reliable

19 Probe Variation - II Typical probes are two orders of magnitude different! CG content is most important factor RNA target folding also affects hybridization 3x10 4 0

20 Principles of MAS 5 method First estimate background bg = MM (if physically possible) bg = MM (if physically possible) log(bg) = log(PM)-log(non-specific proportion) (if impossible) log(bg) = log(PM)-log(non-specific proportion) (if impossible) Non-specific proportion = max(SB,  ) Non-specific proportion = max(SB,  ) SB = Tukeybiweight(log(PM)-log(MM)) SB = Tukeybiweight(log(PM)-log(MM)) Signal = Tukeybiweight(log(Adjusted PM)) Signal = Tukeybiweight(log(Adjusted PM))

21 Critique of MAS 5principle ‘Average’ of different probes isn’t really meaningful, since probes have intrinsically different hybridization characteristics The MAS5 method doesn’t ‘learn’ based on cross-chip performance of individual probes

22 Motivation for multi-chip models: Raw data from a single probe set in a spike-in study; each color represents a different probe in the probe set; note the parallel trend across chips of all probes, although some probe signals depart from the pattern Courtesy of Terry Speed log(PM) log(concentration)

23 Linear Models Extension of linear regression Essential features: –Measurement errors independent of each other ‘random noise’ Needs normalization to eliminate systematic variation –Noise levels comparable at different levels of signal –Small number of factors combine in linear function or simple algebraic form to give predicted levels

24 Model for Probe Signal Each probe signal is proportional to –i) the amount of target sample –   –ii) the affinity of the specific probe sequence to the target –  j NB: High affinity is not the same as specificity –Probe can give high signal to intended target and also to other transcripts 11 22 Probes 1 2 3 chip 1 chip 2      

25 Multiplicative Model Each gene has a set of probes p 1,…,p k Each probe p j binds the gene with efficiency (‘avidity’)  j In each sample there is an amount  i of the target transcript In principle, intensity of probe j on chip i – PM ij – should be proportional to  j x  i Always some noise; and some outliers!

26 Robust Statistics Outlier: a measure that is far beyond the typical random variation –common in biological measures –10-15% in Affy probe sets Robust methods try to fit the majority of data points –Issue is to identify which points to down-weight or ignore –iteratively re-weighted least squares –Median polish

27 Li & Wong (dChip) Model: PM ij =  i  j +  ij - Original model (dChip 1.0) used PM ij - MM ij =  i  j +  ij by analogy with Affy MAS 4 Outlier removal: –Identify extreme residuals –Remove –Re-fit –Iterate until converge Dark blue: PM values Red: fitted values Light blue: probe SD Fitting probes in one set on one chip

28 Critique of Li-Wong model Model assumes that noise for all probes has same magnitude All biological measurements exhibit intensity-dependent noise

29 For each probe set, take the log transform of PM ij =  i  j : i.e. fit the model: Fit this additive model by iteratively re-weighted least-squares or median polish Bolstad, Irizarry & Speed – (RMA) Where nlog() stands for logarithm after normalization

30 Critque of RMA Assumes probe noise is homoschedastic (comparable variances) on log scale In fact noise for low signal probes appears to be much greater Depends on normalization & bg compensation Variance-stabilizing transform seems better in principle; so far not a great deal of improvement in practice

31 Comparing Expression Measures Compare gene abundance estimates based on identical samples (These were non spike-in genes in the spike-in experiment) Better performance means variation of estimates should be smaller The figure shows standard deviations of expression estimates across arrays arranged in four groups of genes by increasing mean expression level Green: MAS5.0; Black: Li-Wong; Blue, Red: RMA Courtesy of Terry Speed

32 Comparison Summary Affymetrix Suite gets better every year –Affymetrix is developing their own multi-chip model MAS P & A calls reasonable proxies for confidence (not gene abundance) –based on probe-by probe comparison of PM & MM MAS 5.0 estimation does a reasonable job on abundant genes dChip and RMA do better on genes that are less abundant –Signalling proteins, transcription factors, etc

33 Model-based QC for Affy Chips Outliers from fitted model may show spatial pattern Portion of an Affy chip Image made with dChip Pink pixels represent probes that do not fit consensus pattern of relative probe intensities These probes will be down-weighted or ignored by a robust multi-chip model. If non-conforming probes are numerous and wide-spread then suspect such a chip

34 Current Work: Improving the Model How to use the MM information profitably –Combine estimates from PM and MM probes? Assessments of probe quality Accurate estimates of probe background Normalization method based on 2-d loess to correct spatial inhomogeneity

35 Relation Between PM and MM Across One Experiment Set Colored symbols are one probe MM PM

36 Probe Specific Background Horizontal lines represent probes; colored symbols correspond to arrays After subtracting individual backgrounds for each probe, the ratios among corresponding arrays are more consistent between probes Fitted Data Probe BG subtracted

37 Software for Affymetrix MAS provided by Affymetrix –Current version 6 in beta testing dChip from www.dchip.orgwww.dchip.org RMA from www.bioconductor.orgwww.bioconductor.org –affy package –Regularly updated –Version with probe background in September from my website: reimers.cgb.ki.se


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