nsFilter() almost always return the same number of filtered genes in different microarrays
1
0
Entering edit mode
7.0 years ago
arronar ▴ 290

Hello.

I'm about to process around 6 different microarray datasets and currently I'm working on the filtering step by using the nsFilter() function from geneFilter library.

After running the raw data through the RMA algorithm, I'm using the following code with a custom function in order to remove the filtered genes.

frma.filtered <- nsFilter(frma.data, require.entrez=FALSE, remove.dupEntrez=FALSE)
frma.data = remove.filtered.genes( filtered.data, frma.data )

remove.filtered.genes <- function( filtered.data , rma.data ){

  for ( i in 1:nrow(filtered.data) ){

    index = which(row.names(rma.data) == row.names(filtered.data)[i] )

    if( length(index) == 1 )
      rma.data = rma.data[-index, ]
    else
      print( paste("[Err] Problem with ", row.names(filtered.data)[i] , " it's exists more than one time in the original (non filtered) data", sep="") )
  }
  rma.data
}

The thing now is that I realized that for the 5 out of 6 datasets, the result of the frma.filtered$filter.log is the same.

$numLowVar
[1] 27307

$feature.exclude
[1] 62

Is this something expected that depends on microarray chip or is a fault/miss-usage of mine?

Thank you.

microarray nsfilter gene-filtering R • 2.6k views
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0
Entering edit mode
7.0 years ago

The nsFilter() function will decide which transcripts to remove by looking at all samples together. So, you should just have a single list of genes that were removed for each failed QC flag.

I have not used nsFilter, ever, in the past and prefer to manage my own QC of microarrays (old fashioned); however, I'm not alone in my skepticism of this function: Question: Filtering array data with nsFilter

Kevin

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0
Entering edit mode

Thank you very much for your answer. Do you think that the following approach is better ?

library(genefilter)
f1 <- pOverA(0.25, log2(100))
f2 <- function(x) (IQR(x) > 0.5)
ff <- filterfun(f1, f2)
selected <- genefilter(eset, ff)
sum(selected)
esetSub <- eset[selected, ]
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0
Entering edit mode

To answer that, I will ask you a question: why do you feel the need to apply these filters to your data? The main microarray data processing algorithm, i.e., RMA normalisation, is designed to deal with virtually all issues related to data distribution and background noise. Are you noticing further issue with your data post normalisation?

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