About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 56. Chapters: Microarray, Virtual Karyotype, DNA microarray, Gene expression profiling, Reverse phase protein lysate microarray, ChIP-on-chip, Biochip, MAGIChip, Cell-free protein array, Tiling array, Microarray analysis techniques, Affymetrix, Suspension array technology, Significance analysis of microarrays, Illumina, Protein microarray, Gene chip analysis, CIT Program Tumor Identity Cards, SNP array, FluChip, DNA microarray experiment, Microarray databases, FlexGen, MammaPrint, Synthetic genetic array, Array comparative genomic hybridization, Phalanx Biotech Group, Antibody microarray, MA plot, Chemical compound microarray, Frozen tissue array, Tissue microarray, Nucleotide universal IDentifier, Representation oligonucleotide microarray analysis, AmpliChip CYP450 Test, Rank product, UniPROBE, RNA spike-in, CombiMatrix, PMHC cellular microarray, Artade, RIP-Chip, Spectral Genomics, CaSNP, GESS, MicroArray and Gene Expression, Silverquant, ARACNE, Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment, Affymetrix GeneChip Operating Software, Methylation specific oligonucleotide microarray, SDRF, DNA gene-expression microarray, Cophenetic. Excerpt: Virtual Karyotype (also array comparative genomic hybridization, chromosomal microarray analysis(CMA), microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization, array CGH, a-CGH, aCGH, or molecular karyotyping, if using SNP-based arrays, also SNP array karyotyping, molecular allelokaryotyping or SOMA) detects genomic copy number variations at a higher resolution level than conventional karyotyping or chromosome-based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). A karyotype (Fig 1) is the characteristic chromosome complement of a eukaryote species. A karyotype is typically presented as an image of the chromosomes from a single cell arranged from largest (chromosome 1) to smallest (chromosome 22), with...