Abstract

For accurate and reliable gene expression analysis, normalization of gene expression data against housekeeping genes (reference or internal control genes) is required. It is known that commonly used housekeeping genes (e.g. ACTB, GAPDH, HPRT1, and B2M) vary considerably under different experimental conditions and therefore their use for normalization is limited. We performed a meta-analysis of 13,629 human gene array samples in order to identify the most stable expressed genes. Here we show novel candidate housekeeping genes (e.g. RPS13, RPL27, RPS20 and OAZ1) with enhanced stability among a multitude of different cell types and varying experimental conditions. None of the commonly used housekeeping genes were present in the top 50 of the most stable expressed genes. In addition, using 2,543 diverse mouse gene array samples we were able to confirm the enhanced stability of the candidate novel housekeeping genes in another mammalian species. Therefore, the identified novel candidate housekeeping genes seem to be the most appropriate choice for normalizing gene expression data.

Keywords

Housekeeping geneGeneBiologyReference genesGeneticsHousekeepingComputational biologyCandidate geneGene expression profilingGene expression

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBase SequenceDNA PrimersGenesEssentialHumansMiceOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisSelectionGenetic

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
2
Issue
9
Pages
e898-e898
Citations
748
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

748
OpenAlex
26
Influential
632
CrossRef

Cite This

Hendrik J.M. de Jonge, Rudolf S.N. Fehrmann, Eveline S.J.M. de Bont et al. (2007). Evidence Based Selection of Housekeeping Genes. PLoS ONE , 2 (9) , e898-e898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000898

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0000898
PMID
17878933
PMCID
PMC1976390

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%