SE182:/DS1
Sample Set Information
ID | TSE1340 |
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Title | Determining novel functions of Arabidopsis 14-3-3 proteins in central metabolic processes. |
Description | BACKGROUND: 14-3-3 proteins are considered master regulators of many signal transduction cascades in eukaryotes. In plants, 14-3-3 proteins have major roles as regulators of nitrogen and carbon metabolism, conclusions based on the studies of a few specific 14-3-3 targets. |
Authors | Diaz, C., Kusano, M., Sulpice, R., Araki, M., Redestig, H., Saito, K., Stitt, M. and Shin, R. |
Reference | BMC Syst Biol. 2011 Nov 21;5:192. doi: 10.1186/1752-0509-5-192. |
Comment |
Data Analysis Details Information
ID | DS1 |
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Title | Statistical analysis |
Description | SIMCA-P +12 software (Umetrics, UmeƄ, Sweden) were used for multivariate statistical analyses (i.e., PCA and OPLS-DA) and the R statistical environment http://cran.r-project.org for other statistical analyses such as the cross-contribution compensating multiple standard normalization (CCMN) and calculation of a false discovery rate (FDR). The PCA and OPLS-DA models were used to visualize the high-dimensional data and determine the metabolomic variation between the control (wild type) and the mutants (ox and/or KO). PCA was carried out to show how different variables (metabolites) change in relation to each other. OPLS-DA, which is as an extension of the supervised multivariate regression method PLS, was employed to remove some variation which was uncorrelated to class separation.
Differentially abundant metabolites were identified using the LIMMA package. Briefly, a linear model was fitted to each metabolite to compare the levels of wild type with levels in the mutants. Significant changes were declared for metabolites with a FDR level < 0.05. The day and night change of metabolites were analyzed as described. Three of the harvested shoots were pooled as a replicate and six to eight replicates per genotype were analyzed. For day condition, long-day-grown (16 h light/8 h dark) plants were harvested 1 hour before offset of light and for night condition the plants were harvested 1 hour before onset of light. All data sets were analyzed for statistical differences compared to wild type by t-test using Prism 5 program (GraphicPad software, La Jolla, USA). |
Comment_of_details |