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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Journal of Evolutionary BiologyVolume 18 Issue 4, Pages 901 - 910 Published Online: 13 Jul 2005 Journal compilation © 2010 European Society for Evolutionary Biology Published on behalf of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB)
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 164K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The biological limitations of transcriptomics in elucidating stress and stress responses Copyright 2005 EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY KEYWORDS fitness • genomic arrays • mRNA abundance • stress response • transcriptomics • transcriptional profiling Abstract
Global analysis of mRNA abundance via genomic arrays (i.e. transcriptomics or transcriptional profiling) is one approach to finding the genes that matter to organisms undergoing environmental stress. In evolutionary analyses of stress, mRNA abundance is often invoked as a proxy for the protein activity that may underlie variation in fitness. To provoke discussion of the utility and sensible application of this valuable approach, this manuscript examines the adequacy of mRNA abundance as a proxy for protein activity, fitness and stress. Published work to date suggests that mRNA abundance typically provides little information on protein activity and fitness and cannot substitute for detailed functional and ecological analyses of candidate genes. While the transcriptional profile can be an exquisitely sensitive indicator of stress, simpler indicators will often suffice. In view of this outcome, transcriptomics should undergo careful cost-benefit analysis before investigators deploy it in studies of stress responses and their evolution. Received 20 December 2004; revised 13 February 2005; accepted 16 February 2005 |