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The New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Electronic Theses & Dissertations Project

Title: An application in bioinformatics : a comparison of affymetrix and compugen human genome microarrays
Author: Misra, Milind
View Online: njit-etd2003-053
(xi, 73 pages ~ 5.2 MB pdf)
Department: Federated Biological Sciences Department of NJIT and Rutgers-Newark
Degree: Master of Science
Program: Computational Biology
Document Type: Thesis
Advisory Committee: Recce, Michael (Committee chair)
Malhotra, Sanjay V. (Committee member)
Skawinski, William John (Committee member)
Date: 2003-05
Keywords: Human genome
Microarrays
Bioinformatics
Availability: Unrestricted
Abstract:

The human genome microarrays from Compugen® and Affymetrix® were compared in the context of the emerging field of computational biology. The two premier database servers for genomic sequence data, the National Center for Biotechnology Information and the European Bioinformatics Institute, were described in detail. The various databases and data mining tools available through these data servers were also discussed. Microarrays were examined from a historical perspective and their main current applications-expression analysis, mutation analysis, and comparative genomic hybridization-were discussed. The two main types of microarrays, cDNA spotted microarrays and high-density spotted microarrays were analyzed by exploring the human genome microarray from Compugen® and the HGU133 Set from Affymetrix® respectively. Array design issues, sequence collection and analysis, and probe selection processes for the two representative types of arrays were described. The respective chip design of the two types of microarrays was also analyzed. It was found that the human genome microarray from Compugen 0 contains probes that interrogate 1,119,840 bases corresponding to 18,664 genes, while the HG-U133 Set from Affymetrix® contains probes that interrogate only 825,000 bases corresponding to 33,000 genes. Based on this, the efficiency of the 25-mer probes of the HG-U133 Set from Affymetrix® compared to the 60-mer probes of the microarray from Compugen® was questioned.


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