[BioC] Colourful way of visualising differential analysis results
Yannick Wurm
yannick.wurm at unil.ch
Mon Nov 10 17:54:55 CET 2008
Hi Dan,
for this kind of thing, I'll fit another limma model just to obtain
estimates of what needs to be visualized...
In one case, I needed to separately visualize expression levels from
each biological replicate, but variability was such that I had
grouped them together in my model. To estimate expression levels for
each biological replicate, I recreated a targets file, separating
each biological replicate by name. Then calculated a fit, and asked
for contrasts between each sample and one RNA which I chose as
reference. (centering expression levels within each gene afterwards
works too)
Despite a complex design it was thus possible to generate a heatmap
where each of the 8 biological replicated RNAs from 3 different
conditions where represented separately.
hope this helps,
yannick
--------------------------------------------
yannick . wurm @ unil . ch
Ant Genomics, Ecology & Evolution @ Lausanne
http://www.unil.ch/dee/page28685_fr.html
On Nov 10, 2008, at 17:33 , Daniel Brewer wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> I am doing some work on a two-colour microarray (Agilent)
> experiment and
> I have used limma to do some differential analysis. The person I am
> doing this work was keen to have a heatmap of the differentially
> expressed genes expression levels. Unfortunately, the design is
> rather
> complex and random (closer to a loop design than a common
> reference) so
> its not possible to produce a traditional heatmap. I was wondering if
> anyone had any suggestions of a colourful way to show that the
> expression of the two groups are different?
>
> In particular I was thinking that there must be estimates of the
> expression and error in each group by the linear model, but couldn't
> work out how to find these.
>
> Thanks
>
> Dan
>
> --
> **************************************************************
> Daniel Brewer, Ph.D.
>
> Institute of Cancer Research
> Molecular Carcinogenesis
> Email: daniel.brewer at icr.ac.uk
> **************************************************************
>
> The Institute of Cancer Research: Royal Cancer Hospital, a
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> under Company No. 534147 with its Registered Office at 123 Old
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