Abstract

BackgroundNormalization of gene expression data refers to the comparison of expression values using reference standards that are consistent across all conditions of an experiment. In PCR studies, genes designated as "housekeeping genes" have been used as internal reference genes under the assumption that their expression is stable and independent of experimental conditions. However, verification of this assumption is rarely performed. Here we assess the use of gene microarray analysis to facilitate selection of internal reference sequences with higher expression stability across experimental conditions than can be expected using traditional selection methods.We recently demonstrated that relative gene expression from qRT-PCR data normalized using GAPDH, ALG9 and RPL13A expression values mirrored relative expression using quantile normalization in Robust Multichip Analysis (RMA) on the Affymetrix® GeneChip® rhesus Macaque Genome Array.Having shown that qRT-PCR and Affymetrix® GeneChip® data from the same hormone replacement therapy (HRT) study yielded concordant results, we used quantile-normalized gene microarray data to identify the most stably expressed among probe sets for prospective internal reference genes across three brain regions from the HRT study and an additional study of normally menstruating rhesus macaques (cycle study). Gene selection was limited to 575 previously published human "housekeeping" genes. Twelve animals were used per study, and three brain regions were analyzed from each animal. Gene expression stabilities were determined using geNorm, NormFinder and BestKeeper software packages.ResultsSequences co-annotated for ribosomal protein S27a (RPS27A), and ubiquitin were among the most stably expressed under all conditions and selection criteria used for both studies. Higher annotation quality on the human GeneChip® facilitated more targeted analysis than could be accomplished using the rhesus GeneChip®. In the cycle study, multiple probe sets annotated for actin, gamma 1 (ACTG1) showed high signal intensity and were among the most stably expressed.ConclusionsUsing gene microarray analysis, we identified genes showing high expression stability under various sex-steroid environments in different regions of the rhesus macaque brain. Use of quantile-normalized microarray gene expression values represents an improvement over traditional methods of selecting internal reference genes for PCR analysis.

Highlights

  • Normalization of gene expression data refers to the comparison of expression values using reference standards that are consistent across all conditions of an experiment

  • Sequences co-annotated for ribosomal protein S27a (RPS27A), and ubiquitin were among the most stably expressed under all conditions and selection criteria used for both studies

  • Use of quantile-normalized microarray gene expression values represents an improvement over traditional methods of selecting internal reference genes for PCR analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Normalization of gene expression data refers to the comparison of expression values using reference standards that are consistent across all conditions of an experiment. Normalizer data for macaque brain tissues is sparse because the availability of genetic material from specific brain regions in properly controlled groups of macaques is very rare and difficult to obtain To help overcome this problem, we recently used qRT-PCR and gene microarrays to examine expression stability for genes regulating γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) trafficking in response to variation in circulating levels of ovarian steroids in the arcuate nucleus of the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH), hippocampus (HPC) and amygdala (AMD) in a study designed for examination of effects of hormone replacement therapy on gene expression (HRT study). We present further details of our qRT-PCR relative expression stability analyses using the software algorithm bundles: geNorm [30], NormFinder [31] and BestKeeper [32] We compare these data with relative gene expression stabilities from quantile-normalized RMA pre-processed (RMA-normalized) microarray results from the same (HRT) study examined using the rhesus GeneChip®. In addition we compare relative expression stabilities from a separate study of normally cycling macaques (cycle study) where we conducted microarray analysis of the same brain regions (MBH, HPC and AMD) using the Affymetrix® GeneChip® Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0 microarray (human GeneChip®)

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