Dear Listers,

I've applied basic shape statistics to a natural oval slab of tissue
in which developmental patterning is known to occur along both major
and minor axes. I've been thinking of the intersection of early gene
expression and shape of structures within the tissue slab. I'm going
to attempt a text diagram below of the direction I'm thinking about,
to see if my problem resonates with any others on the list. The
diagram below will look OK as along as monospace fonts are used.


Let's say the tissue slab is thus:


+--------A--------+
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
M--------+--------L
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
|        |        |
+--------P--------+

and up down is anteroposterior and left right is mediolateral. I have
a some anatomically defined fields in the tissue slab as thus:

+--------A--------+
|                 |
|     --------    |
|     \      /    |
|      \    /     |
|       \  /      |
M ++++   \/       L
| +  +            |
| +  +            |
| ++++    /\      |
|        /  \     |
|       /    \    |
+--------P--------+

I know from pilot work that these fields differ in size and shape
between genetic lines, and thus likely have a genetic causal
component. I know from developmental work that this system is similar
to body plan development, in that transcription factors act as
morphogens during early development, perhaps in gradients along the
major and minor axes. My approach to this problem will be forward
genetic, in the sense that I want reliable measures of the phenotype
(shape) with with to correlate extant genetic polymorphism in
experimental crosses of genetic lines to isolate QTL affecting shape.
On that front I feel confident, and have a grant under review.

Thus, I might have the following hypothetical biological result:

+--------A--------+
|                 |
|     --------    |
|     \      /    |
|      \    /     |
|       \  /      |
M ++++   \/       L
| +  +            |
| +  +            |
| ++++    /\      |
|        /  \     |
|       /    \    |
+--------P--------+

= genotype BB @ X, N = 40 genetic lines, 5 animals per line

+--------A--------+
|    **********   |
|    \        /   |
|     \      /    |
|      \    /     |
| ****  \  /      |
M +  +   \/  *    L
| +  +      /|    |
| +  +     / |    |
| ++++    /  |    |
|        /   |    |
|       /    |    |
+--------P--------+

= genotype DD @ X, N = 40 genetic lines, 5 animals per line

I'm less clear about expanding in a direction to meld expression
genetics (aka "genetical genomics") with shape differences, but I
believe this is a very important direction.

With regard to gene expression phenotypes I will be likely limited
(economics and dissection skills) to samples of tissue that divide
the slab into four quadrants from each animal from each genetic line:

+--------A--------+
|        |        |
|        |        |
|    1   |    2   |
|        |        |
|        |        |
M--------+--------L
|        |        |
|        |        |
|    3   |    4   |
|        |        |
|        |        |
+--------P--------+

It is then relatively easy to find QTL affecting anteroposterior and
mediolateral differences in gene expression. It is also then possible
to look for cis-QTL in this data set and the same QTL in the shape
data set above for overlap.

But I'd also like to directly associate gene expression differences
by quadrants with shape differences. I have not yet figured out the
appropriate Monte Carlo analysis to assess power or the most
efficient statistic association methods to employ, but I'm working on
that.

Is anyone else thinking on similar problems??

-Dave

--
David C. Airey, Ph.D.
Research Assistant Professor

Department of Pharmacology
School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
8148-A Medical Research Building 3
465 21st Avenue South
Nashville, TN 37232-8548

TEL   (615) 936-1510
FAX   (615) 936-3747
EMAIL [EMAIL PROTECTED]
URL   http://people.vanderbilt.edu/~david.c.airey/vita/
URL   http://www.vanderbilt.edu/pharmacology





--
Replies will be sent to the list.
For more information visit http://www.morphometrics.org

Reply via email to