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DNA Microarrays

DNA microarrays allow researchers to analyze gene expression levels across thousands of genes simultaneously. The document describes the process of using DNA microarrays to compare gene expression between cancerous and healthy skin tissue samples. mRNA is isolated from each sample, labeled with different fluorescent dyes, and hybridized to a microarray slide containing DNA probes. A scanner then detects the fluorescent signals, allowing researchers to see which genes are over- or under-expressed in the cancerous sample compared to the healthy one. This information can provide insights into the genomics of diseases like cancer.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views39 pages

DNA Microarrays

DNA microarrays allow researchers to analyze gene expression levels across thousands of genes simultaneously. The document describes the process of using DNA microarrays to compare gene expression between cancerous and healthy skin tissue samples. mRNA is isolated from each sample, labeled with different fluorescent dyes, and hybridized to a microarray slide containing DNA probes. A scanner then detects the fluorescent signals, allowing researchers to see which genes are over- or under-expressed in the cancerous sample compared to the healthy one. This information can provide insights into the genomics of diseases like cancer.

Uploaded by

hira jamil
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DNA Microarrays

Dr. Abdul Wahab


Department of Microbiology
University of Karachi
What is a Microarray?
• “Microarray” has become a general term, there are
many types now
– DNA microarrays
– Protein microarrays
– Tissue microarray
–…
• We’ll be discussing DNA microarrays
What is a DNA Microarray

• A grid of DNA spots (probes) on a substrate used


to detect complementary sequences
• The DNA spots can be deposited by
– piezolectric (ink jet style)
– Pen
– Photolithography (Affymetrix)
• The substrate can be plastic, glass, silicon
(Affymetrix)
• RNA/DNA of interest is labelled & hybridizes with
the array
• Hybridization with probes is detected optically.
Several types of arrays
• Spotted DNA arrays
– Developed by Pat Brown’s lab at Stanford
– PCR products of full-length genes (>100nt)
• Affymetrix gene chips
– Photolithography technology from computer
industry allows building many 25-mers
• Ink-jet microarrays from Agilent
– 25-60-mers “printed directly on glass slides
– Flexible, rapid, but expensive
GeneChip Technology
Affymetrix Inc
Miniaturized, high density arrays of 1,300,000 DNA
oligos 1-cm by 1-cm

Manufacturing Process

Solid-phase chemical synthesis and


Photolithographic fabrication techniques employed
in semiconductor industry
Array Fabrication Photolithography

• Light activated synthesis


• synthesize oligonucleotides on glass
slides
• 107copies per oligo in 24 x 24 um square
• Use 20 pairs of different 25-mers per gene
• Perfect match and mismatch
Array Fabrication Photolithography
Affymetrix Microarrays
Raw image

1.28cm

50um
~107 oligonucleotides,
half perfectly match mRNA
(PM),
half have one mismatch (MM)
Raw gene expression is
intensity difference: PM - MM
Printed cDNA or Oligonucleotide Arrays
· Robotically spotted cDNAs (50mer) or Oligonucleotides (70mers) vs.
Affymetrix’s that uses 25mers

• Printed on Nylon, Plastic, or Glass surface


Steel spotting pin
Spotted arrays

chemically modified slides

384 well source plate


1 nanolitre spots
90-120 um diameter
Building the chip
PCR amplification
Directly from colonies with SP6-T7
primers in 96-well plates

Consolidate into
384-well plates

Arrayed Library
(96 or 384-well plates of
bacterial glycerol stocks)

Spot as microarray
on glass slides
Microarray Life Cycle
Biological
Question

Data Analysis &


Modelling
Sample
Preparation

Microarray Detection

Microarray Reaction
Biological question
Differentially expressed genes
Sample class prediction etc.

Experimental design

Microarray experiment
16-bit TIFF files

Image analysis
(Rfg, Rbg), (Gfg, Gbg)

Normalization
R, G

Estimation Testing Clustering Discrimination

Biological verification
and interpretation
Cartridge-based Expression
Microarrays
Involves Fluorescently tagged
biotinylated cRNA

-One chip per sample


-Uses single fluorescent dye
-More expensive

Affymetrix GeneChip Image


Spotted cDNA and Oligo Glass
Arrays
Involves two dyes on the same slide
• Red dye-Cy5
• Green dye-Cy3
• Control and experimental
cDNA on same chip
Pros/Cons of Different
Technologies
Spotted Arrays Affy Gene Chips
• relative cheap to make • expensive ($500 or more)
(~$10 slide) • limited types avail, no
• flexible - spot anything chance of specialized
you want chips
• Cheap so can repeat • fewer repeated
experiments many times
experiments usually
• highly variable spot
deposition • more uniform DNA
• usually have to make feaures
your own • Can buy off the shelf
• Accuracy at extremes in • Dynamic range may be
range may be less slightly better
Purposes
• So why do we use DNA microarray?
– To measure changes in gene expression levels – two
samples’ gene expression can be compared from
different samples, such as from cells of different stages
of mitosis
– To observe genomic gains and losses. Microarray
Comparative Genomic Hybridization (CGH)
– To observe mutations in DNA
Several types of arrays
• Spotted DNA arrays
– Developed by Pat Brown’s lab at Stanford
– PCR products of full-length genes (>100nt)
• Affymetrix gene chips
– Photolithography technology from computer
industry allows building many 25-mers
• Ink-jet microarrays from Agilent
– 25-60-mers “printed directly on glass slides
– Flexible, rapid, but expensive
Central “Assumption” of Gene
Expression Microarrays
• The level of a given mRNA is positively correlated
with the expression of the associated protein.
– Higher mRNA levels mean higher protein
expression, lower mRNA means lower protein
expression
• Other factors:
– Protein degradation, mRNA degradation,
polyadenylation, codon preference, translation
rates, alternative splicing, translation lag…
• This is relatively obvious, but worth emphasizing
An Array Experiment
STEP 1: Collect Samples
 This can be from a variety of organisms. We’ll use two
samples – cancerous human skin tissue & healthy
human skin tissue
STEP 2: Isolate mRNA
• Extract the RNA from the samples. Using either a
column, or a solvent such as phenol-chloroform.

• After isolating the RNA, we need to isolate the mRNA


from the rRNA and tRNA. mRNA has a poly-A tail, so
we can use a column containing beads with poly-T tails
to bind the mRNA.

• Rinse with buffer to release the mRNA from the beads.


The buffer disrupts the pH, disrupting the hybrid
bonds.
STEP 3: Create Labelled DNA
• Add a labelling mix to the
RNA. The labelling mix
contains poly-T (oligo dT)
primers, reverse transcriptase
(to make cDNA), and
fluorescently dyed nucleotides.
• We will add cyanine 3
(fluoresces green) to the
healthy cells and cyanine 5
(fluoresces red) to the
cancerous cells.
• The primer and RT bind to the
mRNA first, then add the
fluorescently dyed nucleotides,
creating a complementary
strand of DNA
STEP 4: Hybridization
• Apply the cDNA we
have just created to a
microarray plate.

• When comparing two


samples, apply both
samples to the same
plate.

• The ssDNA will bind to


the cDNA already
present on the plate.
Hybridization chamber
3XSSC

HYB CHAMBER

ARRAY

LIFTERSLIP

SLIDE
LABEL
SLIDE LABEL

• Humidity
• Temperature
• Formamide
(Lowers the Tm)
STEP 5: LASERS!
STEP 5: Microarray Scanner
 The scanner has a laser, a computer,
and a camera.

 The laser causes the hybrid bonds to


fluoresce.

 The camera records the images


produced when the laser scans the
plate.

 The computer allows us to


immediately view our results and it
also stores our data.
Scan
Scan

Green: down regulate


Red: up regulate
Yellow: equal level
STEP 6: Analyze the Data
 GREEN – the healthy sample hybridized
more than the diseased sample.
 RED – the diseased/cancerous sample
hybridized more than the non diseased
sample.
 YELLOW - both samples hybridized
equally to the target DNA.
 BLACK - areas where neither sample
hybridized to the target DNA.
 By comparing the differences in gene
expression between the two samples, we
can understand more about the
genomics of a disease.
Image Analysis & Data Visualization
Cy5 Cy5
log2
Cy3 Cy5 Cy3 Cy3

200 10000 50.00 5.64


4800 4800 1.00 0.00
9000 300 0.03 -4.91

Experiments
Underexpressed 8
4
2
Genes

fold
2
4
Overexpressed
8
Data Normalization
• Normalize data to correct for variances
– Dye bias
– Location bias
– Intensity bias
– Pin bias
– Slide bias
• Control vs. non-control spots
Data Normalization
Uncalibrated, red light under Calibrated, red and green equally
detected detected
Hierarchical clustering
Genomic Reprogramming in Response to Oxidant minutes
0 10 20 40 60 120

One-third of genome expression is


transiently reprogrammed

6218 genes

Fold repression Fold induction


>9 >6 >3 1:1 >3 >6 >9
Heat map representing the expression level of selected genes of Salmonella wild type and baeR mutant in LB
+/−20mM sodium tungstate.

Appia-Ayme C, Patrick E, J. Sullivan M, Alston MJ, et al. (2011) Novel Inducers of the Envelope Stress Response BaeSR in Salmonella
Typhimurium: BaeR Is Critically Required for Tungstate Waste Disposal. PLoS ONE 6(8): e23713. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0023713
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0023713
Differentially expressed genes during cell cycle
Microarray Limitations
• Cross-hybridization of sequences with high identity
• Chip to chip variation
• True measure of abundance?
• Does mRNA levels reflect protein levels?
• Generally, do not “prove” new biology - simply
suggest genes involved in a process, a hypothesis
that will require traditional experimental
verification.
• What fold change has biological relevance?
• Need cloned EST or some sequence knowledge --
rare messages may be undetected
• Expensive!! Not every lab can afford experiment
repeat.
• The real limitation is Bioinformatics
Microarray Potential Applications
• Biological discovery
– new and better molecular diagnostics
– new molecular targets for therapy
– finding and refining biological pathways
– Mutation and polymorphism detection

• Recent examples
– molecular diagnosis of leukemia, breast
cancer, ...
– appropriate treatment for genetic signature
– potential new drug targets

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