4.7 Article

Simple regression for correcting ΔCt bias in RT-qPCR low-density array data normalization

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-015-1274-1

Keywords

RT-PCR; Normalization; Delta C-t; Housekeeping genes; Regression

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [N01 AR-6-2278, P60 AR048095, P60 AR064172, R01 AR057202, K23 AR062100, K01 AR060848]
  2. National Institutes of Health

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Background: Reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) is considered the gold standard for quantifying relative gene expression. Normalization of RT-qPCR data is commonly achieved by subtracting the C-t values of the internal reference genes from the C-t values of the target genes to obtain Delta C-t Delta C-t values are then used to derive Delta Delta C-t when compared to a control group or to conduct further statistical analysis. Results: We examined two rheumatoid arthritis RT-qPCR low density array datasets and found that this normalization method introduces substantial bias due to differences in PCR amplification efficiency among genes. This bias results in undesirable correlations between target genes and reference genes, which affect the estimation of fold changes and the tests for differentially expressed genes. Similar biases were also found in multiple public mRNA and miRNA RT-qPCR array datasets we analysed. We propose to regress the C-t values of the target genes onto those of the reference genes to obtain regression coefficients, which are then used to adjust the reference gene C-t values before calculating Delta C-t. Conclusions: The per-gene regression method effectively removes the Delta C-t bias. This method can be applied to both low density RT-qPCR arrays and individual RT-qPCR assays.

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