Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies

Many studies in biological psychiatry compare the abundance of individual messenger RNAs between cases and control subjects or, more recently, between genotype groups. Most utilize some form of normalization procedure, usually expressing the transcript(s) of interest relative to that of a housekeepi...

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Main Authors: Tunbridge, E, Eastwood, S, Harrison, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2011
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author Tunbridge, E
Eastwood, S
Harrison, P
author_facet Tunbridge, E
Eastwood, S
Harrison, P
author_sort Tunbridge, E
collection OXFORD
description Many studies in biological psychiatry compare the abundance of individual messenger RNAs between cases and control subjects or, more recently, between genotype groups. Most utilize some form of normalization procedure, usually expressing the transcript(s) of interest relative to that of a housekeeping gene or genes (also called reference genes), to overcome various sources of experimental error. Indeed, normalization is such a standard procedure that its purpose, principles, and limitations are sometimes overlooked, and some papers lack sufficient information as to its implementation. Here, we review the rationales for normalization and argue that in well-conducted psychiatric gene expression studies using human brain tissue, it is reducing intersubject variability rather than experimental error that is the major benefit of normalization. We also review the conceptual and empirical basis for the category of housekeeping genes-i.e., genes with a ubiquitous and invariant expression. We conclude that the evidence is against any such simple categorization and that a more pragmatic, less dogmatic, approach to the selection and implementation of reference genes is required, which takes into account the particular issues that pertain to human brain tissue studies. This pragmatism extends to the issue of whether normalization should be to one or multiple reference genes. We end by making several recommendations toward a more flexible, transparent, and comprehensive approach to data presentation and analysis. We illustrate the review with examples from studies of schizophrenia and mood disorder.
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spelling oxford-uuid:cc691050-2da2-46a0-b0e2-d20fb0a792b02022-03-27T07:21:43ZChanged relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studiesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:cc691050-2da2-46a0-b0e2-d20fb0a792b0EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Tunbridge, EEastwood, SHarrison, PMany studies in biological psychiatry compare the abundance of individual messenger RNAs between cases and control subjects or, more recently, between genotype groups. Most utilize some form of normalization procedure, usually expressing the transcript(s) of interest relative to that of a housekeeping gene or genes (also called reference genes), to overcome various sources of experimental error. Indeed, normalization is such a standard procedure that its purpose, principles, and limitations are sometimes overlooked, and some papers lack sufficient information as to its implementation. Here, we review the rationales for normalization and argue that in well-conducted psychiatric gene expression studies using human brain tissue, it is reducing intersubject variability rather than experimental error that is the major benefit of normalization. We also review the conceptual and empirical basis for the category of housekeeping genes-i.e., genes with a ubiquitous and invariant expression. We conclude that the evidence is against any such simple categorization and that a more pragmatic, less dogmatic, approach to the selection and implementation of reference genes is required, which takes into account the particular issues that pertain to human brain tissue studies. This pragmatism extends to the issue of whether normalization should be to one or multiple reference genes. We end by making several recommendations toward a more flexible, transparent, and comprehensive approach to data presentation and analysis. We illustrate the review with examples from studies of schizophrenia and mood disorder.
spellingShingle Tunbridge, E
Eastwood, S
Harrison, P
Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title_full Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title_fullStr Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title_full_unstemmed Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title_short Changed relative to what? Housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
title_sort changed relative to what housekeeping genes and normalization strategies in human brain gene expression studies
work_keys_str_mv AT tunbridgee changedrelativetowhathousekeepinggenesandnormalizationstrategiesinhumanbraingeneexpressionstudies
AT eastwoods changedrelativetowhathousekeepinggenesandnormalizationstrategiesinhumanbraingeneexpressionstudies
AT harrisonp changedrelativetowhathousekeepinggenesandnormalizationstrategiesinhumanbraingeneexpressionstudies