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In caArray, before an experiment can be successfully created, the array design(s) for platforms used in that experiment have to be imported first. Afterwards, the corresponding array designs can must be associated with the experiment in one of two ways:

Approach 1

The most common way to associate the array designs is to select them when the experiment is created, as shown in Figure 1 below. By selecting array design(s) this way, you are telling caArray that the selected array design(s) correspond to the data files to be uploaded.

The corresponding array designs for your experiment must be selected on the 'New Experiment' page in caArrayImage Modified

Figure 1. On the caArray 'New Experiment' page, the 'Array Designs' box lists all the array designs that have been imported into the experiment. Any designs you select from this list will become associated with the experiment and all the data files uploaded to it.

By selecting the corresponding array design(s) on the 'New Experiment' page, you are telling caArray that the selected array design(s) correspond to the data files to be uploaded. If only one array design is selected, caArray will associate all uploaded data files with that array design and will parse the data accordingly.

If more than one array design is selected, and if the data and sample annotations are in the MAGE-TAB format, additional information needs to be provided in the form of a SDRF metadata file, which is in the CSV file format. In the SDRF file, which lists all the experiment's samples, a column named “Array Design REF” shows the array design reference for each sample, as shown in Figure 2 below. This allows caArray to associate the correct array design with its corresponding array data files.

An SDRF metadata file can be used to specify the respective array designs for multiple samples in an experiment by listing the array design reference IDs for each sample under the 'Array Design REF' columnImage Modified

Figure 2. The 'Array Design REF' column in the SDRF metadata file shows the array design LSID references for each listed sample from the experiment.

When entering the array design information into the SDRF file, be sure to pay attention to the syntax of the LSID reference. The correct reference syntax for most array designs supported by caArray can be found on the NCI instance of caArray at https://array.nci.nih.gov/caarray/home.action. Once you log in, click “Manage Array Designs”, then click on the array design that your data files use, and capture the value for “Array Design LSID”, as shown in Figures 3 and 4 below.

The array design reference ID for your data files can be found on the 'Manage Array Designs' page in caArray by clicking on the array design that your files useImage Modified

Figure 3. To find the LSID reference for an array design, first log in to the NCI caArray instance, then click on 'Manage Array Designs' (highlighted in red) in the left-hand navigation pane and click on the desired array design from the 'Array Designs' page.

screenshot illustrating textImage Modified

Figure 4. For the array design you selected from the 'Manage Array Designs' page, the 'Array Design Details' heading lists several attributes of the array design, including the LSID reference (highlighted in red). This reference can be captured and entered into your SDRF file.

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Agilent.com:PhysicalArrayDesign:012391_D_F_20120130

Approach 2:

A user can choose not to specify any array design when creating an experiment (notice that in Figure 1, the array design field on the web page is not marked by a red asterisk, meaning that field is not required). Instead, s/he can specify the array design(s) in a SDRF file as described above. Please pay attention to the syntax.

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