4.6 Article

Deconvolution of expression microarray data reveals 131I-induced responses otherwise undetected in thyroid tissue

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197911

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [21073]
  2. Swedish Cancer Society [3427]
  3. BioCARE - a National Strategic Research Program at the University of Gothenburg
  4. Swedish Radiation Safety Authority
  5. King Gustav V Jubilee Clinic Cancer Research Foundation
  6. Sahlgrenska University Hospital Research Funds
  7. Assar Gabrielsson Cancer Research Foundation
  8. Adlerbertska Research Fund
  9. Wilhelm and Martina Lundgren science trust fund

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High-throughput gene expression analysis is increasingly used in radiation research for discovery of damage-related or absorbed dose-dependent biomarkers. In tissue samples, cell type-specific responses can be masked in expression data due to mixed cell populations which can preclude biomarker discovery. In this study, we deconvolved microarray data from thyroid tissue in order to assess possible bias from mixed cell type data. Transcript expression data [GSE66303] from mouse thyroid that received 5.9 Gy from I-131 over 24 h (or 0 Gy from mock treatment) were deconvolved by cell frequency of follicular cells and C-cells using csSAM and R and processed with Nexus Expression. Literature-based signature genes were used to assess the relative impact from ionizing radiation (IR) or thyroid hormones (TH). Regulation of cellular functions was inferred by enriched biological processes according to Gene Ontology terms. We found that deconvolution increased the detection rate of significantly regulated transcripts including the biomarker candidate family of kallikrein transcripts. Detection of IR-associated and TH-responding signature genes was also increased in deconvolved data, while the dominating trend of TH-responding genes was reproduced. Importantly, responses in biological processes for DNA integrity, gene expression integrity, and cellular stress were not detected in convoluted data-which was in disagreement with expected dose-response relationships-but upon deconvolution in follicular cells and C-cells. In conclusion, previously reported trends of I-131-induced transcriptional responses in thyroid were reproduced with deconvolved data and usually with a higher detection rate. Deconvolution also resolved an issue with detecting damage and stress responses in enriched data, and may reduce false negatives in other contexts as well. These findings indicate that deconvolution can optimize microarray data analysis of heterogeneous sample material for biomarker screening or other clinical applications.

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