Dmitriy Verkhoturov
2009-Feb-09 18:22 UTC
[R] How to avoid losing a sample as reference running an individual differential expression analysis (LIMMA)
Hello listmemebers, I have data from two-color microarray expression profiling experiments where 3 whole brain (WB) samples were compared to 3 Mauthner Cells (MC) in a loop design (-> MC #1 -> WB #1 -> MC #2 -> WB #2 -> MC #3 -> WB #3 -> MC #1 ->). In addition to phenotype analysis I would also like to run an individual analysis making all pair-wise comparisons. I'm using the LIMMA package in R to do this. The problem is that the contrast matrix that you have to set up requires that one of the samples be designated as a reference, but in doing so you lose the sample. My question is this, is it possible to run individual analysis with this data set without losing one as a reference point? Many thanks in advance, Dmitriy [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Martin Morgan
2009-Feb-10 03:15 UTC
[R] How to avoid losing a sample as reference running an individual differential expression analysis (LIMMA)
Dmitriy Verkhoturov <verkhoturovdm at yahoo.com> writes:> Hello listmemebers, > > I have data from two-color microarray expression profiling experiments > where 3 whole brain (WB) samples were compared to 3 Mauthner Cells > (MC) in a loop design (-> MC #1 -> WB #1 -> MC #2 -> WB #2 -> MC #3 -> > WB #3 -> MC #1 ->). In addition to phenotype analysis I would also > like to run an individual analysis making all pair-wise > comparisons. I'm using the LIMMA package in R to do this. The problem > is that the contrast matrix that you have to set up requires that one > of the samples be designated as a reference, but in doing so you lose > the sample. My question is this, is it possible to run individual > analysis with this data set without losing one as a reference point?Hi Dmitriy -- Please ask Bioconductor questions on the Bioconductor mailing list. http://bioconductor.org/docs/mailList.html Best, Martin> Many thanks in advance, Dmitriy > > > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ R-help at r-project.org > mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do > read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and > provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.-- Martin Morgan Computational Biology / Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 1100 Fairview Ave. N. PO Box 19024 Seattle, WA 98109 Location: Arnold Building M2 B169 Phone: (206) 667-2793