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Uses of microarrays and related methodologies in animal breeding Quic kTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompr es sed) dec ompres sor are needed to see this picture. Bruce Walsh, [email protected] University of Arizona (Depts. of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Molecular & Cellular Biology, Plant Sciences, Animal Sciences, and Epidemology & Biostatistics) The basic idea behind gene expression arrays • With a complete (or partial) genome sequence in hand, one can array sequences from genes of interest on small chip, glass slide, or a membrane • mRNA is extracted from cells of interest and hybridized to the array • Genes showing different levels of mRNA can be detected Types of microarrays • Synthetic oligonucleotide arrays – Chemically synthesize oligonucleotide sequences directly on slide/chip/membrane (e.g., using photolithography) – Affymetrix, Agilent • Spotted cDNA arrays – PCR products from clones of genes of interest are spotted on a glass slide using a robot – Extracted cellular mRNA is reversetranscribed into cDNAs for hybridization Cell type 1 Cell type 2 Extract mRNA Label mRNA with red fluorescent dye (Cy5) Label mRNA with Green fluorescent dye (Cy3) Cell Type 1 Cell type 2 Hybridize mRNA to array The color of the spot corresponds mRNA to theequal mix from cell Types relative concentrations 1 and 2 of mRNAs for that gene in the two cell types mRNAsfor from these mRNAs from these mRNAs these Genes of roughly equal genes more abundant genes more abundant Abundance celltype type21in both cell inin cell types Analysis of microarray data • Image processing and normalization • Detecting significant changes in expression • Clustering and classification – Clustering: detecting groups of co-expressed genes – Classification: finding those genes at which changes in mRNA expression level predicts phenotype Significance testing-- GLM Yklijk = u + Ak +Rkl + Ti + Gj + TGij +elkijk Array k Replicate l Gene j i Treatment in array k between Interaction k-th spotting of gene j under genei ionand treatment treatment replicate l of jarray k Problem of very many tests (genes) vs. few actual data vectors • Expectation: A large number of the GxT interactions will be significant – Controlling experiment-wide p value is very overly conservative (further, tests may be strongly correlated) • Generating a reduced set of genes for future consideration (data mining) – FDR (false discovery rate) – PFP (proportion of false positives) – Empirical Bayes approaches Which loci control array-detected changes in mRNA expression? • Cis-acting factors – Control regions immediately adjacent to the gene • Trans-acting factors – Diffusable factors unlinked (or loosely linked) to the gene of interest • Global (Master) regulators – Trans-acting factors that influence a large number of genes David Treadgill’s (UNC) mouse experiment • Recombinant Inbred lines from a cross of DBA/2J and C57BL • The level of mRNA expression (measured by array analysis) is treated as a quantitative trait and QTL analysis performed for each gene in the array Distribution of >12,000 gene interactions CIS-modifiers MASTER modifiers Genomic location of genes on array TRANS-modifiers Genomic location of mRNA level modifiers Candidate loci : Differences in Gene Expression between lines • Correlate differences in levels of expression with trait levels • Map factors underlying changes in expression – These are (very) often trans-acting factors • Difference between structural alleles and regulatory alleles – Different structural alleles may go undetected on an array analysis Expanded selection opportunities offered by microarrays • GxE – Candidate genes may be suggested by examining levels of mRNA expression over different major environments – With candidates in hand, potential for selection of genes showing reduced variance in expression over critical environments • Breaking (or at least reducing) potentially deleterious genetic correlations – Look for variation in genes that have little (if any) trans-acting effects on other genes Towards the future • Selection decisions using information on gene networks / pathways • Microarrays are one tool for reconstructing gene networks • Additional tools for examining proteinprotein interactions – Two hybrid screens – FRET & FRAP – 2D Protein gels Analysis and Exploitation of Gene and Metabolic Networks • Graph theory • Most estimation and statistical issues unresolved • Major (current) analytic tool: Kascer-Burns Sensitivity Analysis Gene networks are graphs Kascer-Burns Sensitivity Analysis (aka. Metabolic Control Analysis) “All theory modelsshould are wrong, are useful” “No fit allsome the models facts because some of (Box) the facts are wrong” (N. Bohr) Flux = production rate of a Perhaps we increase the concentration of ehere particular product, F 1 However, it may be more efficient The flux control coefficient, introduced by To increase the concentration of e Kascer and Burns, provides a quantitative solution 4 How best to increase the flux through this to this problem pathway? Flux Control Coefficients, j Ci The control coefficient for the flux at step i in a pathway associated with enzyme j, j Ci @F i E j @ln F i = = @E j f i @ln E j Roughly speaking, the control coefficient is the percentage change in flux divided by percentage change in enzyme activity . Flux Why many mutations are recessive: a 50% reduction in activity (the heterozygote) results in only a very small change in the flux Activity When When the the activity activity of of E E is is large, near zero, C C is is close close to to zero 1 Kacser-Burns Flux summation theorem: X j Ci = 1 i •• While Coefficients are notproteins intrinsic properties most valuescoefficient of C for are positive, If a control is greatly • Truly rate-limiting steps are rare negative regulators (repressors) give negativesystem values, of an enzyme, but rather a (local) increased in value, this decreases the allowing for C values > 1. property values of other control coefficients “rate-limiting” steps in pathways Small-Kacser theorem: the factor f by which flux is Hence, the limiting increase in f is increased by an r-fold increase in activity of E is 11 f = j f = 1 °r °C E1 j 1° CE r Using estimated Control Coefficients as selection aids • Loci with larger C values should respond faster to selection • Such loci are obvious targets for screens of natural variation (candidate loci) • Selection with reduced correlations – Tallis or Kempthorne - Nordskog restricted selection index – Select on loci with large C for flux of interest, smallest C for other fluxes not of concern – Positive selection on C for flux of interest, selection to reduce flux changes in other pathways We wish this flux to remain unchanged A more Thecorrect initial approach approach, might however be to is to Flux we wish to increase Pick try theeither step(s)e3that or emaximize CF while e1 orminimizing e2 CH 4, rather than Index selection on pathways • The elements of selection include both phenotype and C, and (possibly) marker markers as well • Problems: – C is a local estimate, changing as the pathway evolves – Still have all the standard concerns with a selection index (e.g., stability of inverse of genetic covariance matrix) – These are important caveats to consider even under the rosy scenaro where all C’s are known What to call it? MAS = Marker Assisted Selection CAS = Control Coefficient Assisted Selection CASH $ = Control Activity Selection Helper Summary • Microarray analysis = data mining • Potential (immediate) useage: – Suggesting candidate loci – More efficient use of G X E – Reducing/breaking deleterious correlations • Cis (easy) vs. trans (hard) control of expression levels • Future = analysis of pathways – Index selection (and all its problems) Farewell from the “desert” U of A Campus QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture.