200
Bioinformatics of the Brain
FIGURE 8.1
A simplified A. Microarray B. RNA-seq workflow.
There are various types of microarrays with DNA microarrays being the
most widely used one. The other microarray technologies include protein, pep-
tide, antibody, transfection, cell, and tissue microarrays [9]. Making use of mi-
croarray technology, one can investigate the concurrent gene expression pat-
terns of thousands of different genes, determine transcription factor binding
sites or genotype single-nucleotide-polymorphism (SNP) [10]. The most impor-
tant purpose of using this technology is to identify a pattern in the investigated
areas. Subsequently, qPCR (quantitative polymerase chain reaction) is used to
validate the microarray findings. There are different microarray platforms such
as Affymetrix (https://www.thermofisher.com/tr/en/home/brands/applied-
biosystems.html), Illumina (https://www.illumina.com) and Agilent
(https://www.agilent.com). Various characteristics set these microarray tech-
nologies apart. For instance, while Illumina arrays use multiple copies of a
single 50-nucleotide probe attached to microbeads to quantify target levels
and Agilent uses a single 60-nucleotide probe per gene on the microarray,
Affymetrix arrays characterize gene expression using a set of different 25-
nucleotide probes synthesized in situ [11, 12].
There are quite a few benefits to using microarray technology. Microar-
rays have well defined protocols for hybridization and the data submission is
standardized. They are also low cost compared to RNA-seq. However, since
microarrays use hybridization techniques prior knowledge of a sequence is re-
quired. There also have been several problems identifying very low and highly
expressed genes using this technique. Background noise can be high. Further-
more, microarrays generally do not identify splice variants and they do not
give paralogue information. Most commonly used microarray platforms use a
single set of manufacturer-designed probes, resulting in an absence of over-
sight over the collection of analyzed transcripts. Another major drawback of