Bioinformatics and Biology Insights (Nov 2024)
The TWW Growth Model and Its Application in the Analysis of Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction
Abstract
It is necessary to accurately capture the growth trajectory of fluorescence where the best fit, precision, and relative efficiency are essential. Having this in mind, a new family of growth functions called TWW (Tabatabai, Wilus, Wallace) was introduced. This model is capable of accurately analyzing quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). This new family provides a reproducible quantitation of gene copies and is less labor-intensive than current quantitative methods. A new cycle threshold based on TWW that does not need the assumption of equal reaction efficiency was introduced. The performance of TWW was compared with 3 classical models (Gompertz, logistic, and Richard) using qPCR data. TWW models the relationship between the cycle number and fluorescence intensity, outperforming some state-of-the-art models in performance measures. The 3-parameter TWW model had the best model fit in 68.57% of all cases, followed by the Richard model (28.57%) and the logistic (2.86%). Gompertz had the worst fit in 88.57% of all cases. It had the best precision in 85.71% of all cases followed by Richard (14.29%). For all cases, Gompertz had the worst precision. TWW had the best relative efficiency in 54.29% of all cases, while the logistic model was best in 17.14% of all cases. Richard and Gompertz tied for the best relative efficiency in 14.29% of all cases. The results indicate that TWW is a good competitor when considering model fit, precision, and efficiency. The 3-parameter TWW model has fewer parameters when compared to the Richard model in analyzing qPCR data, which makes it less challenging to reach convergence.