70,184 research outputs found
Topological network alignment uncovers biological function and phylogeny
Sequence comparison and alignment has had an enormous impact on our
understanding of evolution, biology, and disease. Comparison and alignment of
biological networks will likely have a similar impact. Existing network
alignments use information external to the networks, such as sequence, because
no good algorithm for purely topological alignment has yet been devised. In
this paper, we present a novel algorithm based solely on network topology, that
can be used to align any two networks. We apply it to biological networks to
produce by far the most complete topological alignments of biological networks
to date. We demonstrate that both species phylogeny and detailed biological
function of individual proteins can be extracted from our alignments.
Topology-based alignments have the potential to provide a completely new,
independent source of phylogenetic information. Our alignment of the
protein-protein interaction networks of two very different species--yeast and
human--indicate that even distant species share a surprising amount of network
topology with each other, suggesting broad similarities in internal cellular
wiring across all life on Earth.Comment: Algorithm explained in more details. Additional analysis adde
Tree-guided group lasso for multi-response regression with structured sparsity, with an application to eQTL mapping
We consider the problem of estimating a sparse multi-response regression
function, with an application to expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL)
mapping, where the goal is to discover genetic variations that influence
gene-expression levels. In particular, we investigate a shrinkage technique
capable of capturing a given hierarchical structure over the responses, such as
a hierarchical clustering tree with leaf nodes for responses and internal nodes
for clusters of related responses at multiple granularity, and we seek to
leverage this structure to recover covariates relevant to each
hierarchically-defined cluster of responses. We propose a tree-guided group
lasso, or tree lasso, for estimating such structured sparsity under
multi-response regression by employing a novel penalty function constructed
from the tree. We describe a systematic weighting scheme for the overlapping
groups in the tree-penalty such that each regression coefficient is penalized
in a balanced manner despite the inhomogeneous multiplicity of group
memberships of the regression coefficients due to overlaps among groups. For
efficient optimization, we employ a smoothing proximal gradient method that was
originally developed for a general class of structured-sparsity-inducing
penalties. Using simulated and yeast data sets, we demonstrate that our method
shows a superior performance in terms of both prediction errors and recovery of
true sparsity patterns, compared to other methods for learning a
multivariate-response regression.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-AOAS549 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Gene Expression based Survival Prediction for Cancer Patients: A Topic Modeling Approach
Cancer is one of the leading cause of death, worldwide. Many believe that
genomic data will enable us to better predict the survival time of these
patients, which will lead to better, more personalized treatment options and
patient care. As standard survival prediction models have a hard time coping
with the high-dimensionality of such gene expression (GE) data, many projects
use some dimensionality reduction techniques to overcome this hurdle. We
introduce a novel methodology, inspired by topic modeling from the natural
language domain, to derive expressive features from the high-dimensional GE
data. There, a document is represented as a mixture over a relatively small
number of topics, where each topic corresponds to a distribution over the
words; here, to accommodate the heterogeneity of a patient's cancer, we
represent each patient (~document) as a mixture over cancer-topics, where each
cancer-topic is a mixture over GE values (~words). This required some
extensions to the standard LDA model eg: to accommodate the "real-valued"
expression values - leading to our novel "discretized" Latent Dirichlet
Allocation (dLDA) procedure. We initially focus on the METABRIC dataset, which
describes breast cancer patients using the r=49,576 GE values, from
microarrays. Our results show that our approach provides survival estimates
that are more accurate than standard models, in terms of the standard
Concordance measure. We then validate this approach by running it on the
Pan-kidney (KIPAN) dataset, over r=15,529 GE values - here using the mRNAseq
modality - and find that it again achieves excellent results. In both cases, we
also show that the resulting model is calibrated, using the recent
"D-calibrated" measure. These successes, in two different cancer types and
expression modalities, demonstrates the generality, and the effectiveness, of
this approach
Transcription Factor-DNA Binding Via Machine Learning Ensembles
We present ensemble methods in a machine learning (ML) framework combining
predictions from five known motif/binding site exploration algorithms. For a
given TF the ensemble starts with position weight matrices (PWM's) for the
motif, collected from the component algorithms. Using dimension reduction, we
identify significant PWM-based subspaces for analysis. Within each subspace a
machine classifier is built for identifying the TF's gene (promoter) targets
(Problem 1). These PWM-based subspaces form an ML-based sequence analysis tool.
Problem 2 (finding binding motifs) is solved by agglomerating k-mer (string)
feature PWM-based subspaces that stand out in identifying gene targets. We
approach Problem 3 (binding sites) with a novel machine learning approach that
uses promoter string features and ML importance scores in a classification
algorithm locating binding sites across the genome. For target gene
identification this method improves performance (measured by the F1 score) by
about 10 percentage points over the (a) motif scanning method and (b) the
coexpression-based association method. Top motif outperformed 5 component
algorithms as well as two other common algorithms (BEST and DEME). For
identifying individual binding sites on a benchmark cross species database
(Tompa et al., 2005) we match the best performer without much human
intervention. It also improved the performance on mammalian TFs.
The ensemble can integrate orthogonal information from different weak
learners (potentially using entirely different types of features) into a
machine learner that can perform consistently better for more TFs. The TF gene
target identification component (problem 1 above) is useful in constructing a
transcriptional regulatory network from known TF-target associations. The
ensemble is easily extendable to include more tools as well as future PWM-based
information.Comment: 33 page
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