This is a cintinuation of my reply above:
Actually yesterday I re-read a Comparative Ct method paper by Schmittgen and Livak (Nature protocols, vol 3. no. 6 2008 page 1101), and they recommend to do the statistics on the 2-Ct (for testing of whether the housekeeping gene is appropriate to use), or the 2-dCt (for data where there is no link between the control and treated sample) or the 2-ddCt values (where there is a link between the control and the treated sample; e.g. if the control is a period without treatment in a human and the treated sample is form a treatment in the same person).
And that prompted me to look at several datasets that we are currently evaluating. For these (also when considering tendency for the dCt data to be normal distributed), I decided to use the 2-dCt values for statistics, and in case of normality to run a one-way ANOVA. I also decided for these data to represent the data graphically as the dCt values as percent of control.
Bw Niels
Niels
Member Since 14 Nov 2012Offline Last Active Jan 02 2013 04:24 AM





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