Description
BACKGROUND: The use of gene expression     profiling in both clinical and laboratory settings would     be enhanced by better characterization of variance due     to individual, environmental, and technical factors.     Meta-analysis of microarray data from untreated or     vehicle-treated animals within the control arm of     toxicogenomics studies could yield useful information on     baseline fluctuations in gene expression, although     control animal data has not been available on a scale     and in a form best served for data-mining. RESULTS: A     dataset of control animal microarray expression data was     assembled by a working group of the Health and     Environmental Sciences Institute's Technical Committee     on the Application of Genomics in Mechanism Based Risk     Assessment in order to provide a public resource for     assessments of variability in baseline gene expression.     Data from over 500 Affymetrix microarrays from control     rat liver and kidney were collected from 16 different     institutions. Thirty-five biological and technical     factors were obtained for each animal, describing a wide     range of study characteristics, and a subset were     evaluated in detail for their contribution to total     variability using multivariate statistical and graphical     techniques. CONCLUSIONS: The study factors that emerged     as key sources of variability included gender, organ     section, strain, and fasting state. These and other     study factors were identified as key descriptors that     should be included in the minimal information about a     toxicogenomics study needed for interpretation of     results by an independent source. Genes that are the     most and least variable, gender-selective, or altered by     fasting were also identified and functionally     categorized. Better characterization of gene expression     variability in control animals will aid in the design of     toxicogenomics studies and in the interpretation of     their results. [based on information contained in Final_HESI_Decoder_483_05_015_07.txt provided by CEBS database]