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Temporal Bayesian classifiers for modelling muscular dystrophy expression data
The analysis of microarray data from time-series experiments requires specialised algorithms, which take the temporal ordering of the data into account. In this paper we explore a new architecture of Bayesian classifier that can be used to understand how biological mechanisms differ with respect to time. We show that this classifier improves the classification of microarray data and at the same time ensures that the models can easily be analysed by biologists by incorporating time transparently. In this paper we focus on data that has been generated to explore different types of muscular dystrophy
Predicting Genetic Regulatory Response Using Classification
We present a novel classification-based method for learning to predict gene
regulatory response. Our approach is motivated by the hypothesis that in simple
organisms such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we can learn a decision rule for
predicting whether a gene is up- or down-regulated in a particular experiment
based on (1) the presence of binding site subsequences (``motifs'') in the
gene's regulatory region and (2) the expression levels of regulators such as
transcription factors in the experiment (``parents''). Thus our learning task
integrates two qualitatively different data sources: genome-wide cDNA
microarray data across multiple perturbation and mutant experiments along with
motif profile data from regulatory sequences. We convert the regression task of
predicting real-valued gene expression measurement to a classification task of
predicting +1 and -1 labels, corresponding to up- and down-regulation beyond
the levels of biological and measurement noise in microarray measurements. The
learning algorithm employed is boosting with a margin-based generalization of
decision trees, alternating decision trees. This large-margin classifier is
sufficiently flexible to allow complex logical functions, yet sufficiently
simple to give insight into the combinatorial mechanisms of gene regulation. We
observe encouraging prediction accuracy on experiments based on the Gasch S.
cerevisiae dataset, and we show that we can accurately predict up- and
down-regulation on held-out experiments. Our method thus provides predictive
hypotheses, suggests biological experiments, and provides interpretable insight
into the structure of genetic regulatory networks.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, presented at Twelfth International Conference on
Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology (ISMB 2004), supplemental website:
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/compbio/geneclas
Kernel methods in genomics and computational biology
Support vector machines and kernel methods are increasingly popular in
genomics and computational biology, due to their good performance in real-world
applications and strong modularity that makes them suitable to a wide range of
problems, from the classification of tumors to the automatic annotation of
proteins. Their ability to work in high dimension, to process non-vectorial
data, and the natural framework they provide to integrate heterogeneous data
are particularly relevant to various problems arising in computational biology.
In this chapter we survey some of the most prominent applications published so
far, highlighting the particular developments in kernel methods triggered by
problems in biology, and mention a few promising research directions likely to
expand in the future
Differential gene expression graphs: A data structure for classification in DNA microarrays
This paper proposes an innovative data structure to be used as a backbone in designing microarray phenotype sample classifiers. The data structure is based on graphs and it is built from a differential analysis of the expression levels of healthy and diseased tissue samples in a microarray dataset. The proposed data structure is built in such a way that, by construction, it shows a number of properties that are perfectly suited to address several problems like feature extraction, clustering, and classificatio
Motif Discovery through Predictive Modeling of Gene Regulation
We present MEDUSA, an integrative method for learning motif models of
transcription factor binding sites by incorporating promoter sequence and gene
expression data. We use a modern large-margin machine learning approach, based
on boosting, to enable feature selection from the high-dimensional search space
of candidate binding sequences while avoiding overfitting. At each iteration of
the algorithm, MEDUSA builds a motif model whose presence in the promoter
region of a gene, coupled with activity of a regulator in an experiment, is
predictive of differential expression. In this way, we learn motifs that are
functional and predictive of regulatory response rather than motifs that are
simply overrepresented in promoter sequences. Moreover, MEDUSA produces a model
of the transcriptional control logic that can predict the expression of any
gene in the organism, given the sequence of the promoter region of the target
gene and the expression state of a set of known or putative transcription
factors and signaling molecules. Each motif model is either a -length
sequence, a dimer, or a PSSM that is built by agglomerative probabilistic
clustering of sequences with similar boosting loss. By applying MEDUSA to a set
of environmental stress response expression data in yeast, we learn motifs
whose ability to predict differential expression of target genes outperforms
motifs from the TRANSFAC dataset and from a previously published candidate set
of PSSMs. We also show that MEDUSA retrieves many experimentally confirmed
binding sites associated with environmental stress response from the
literature.Comment: RECOMB 200
A graph-based representation of Gene Expression profiles in DNA microarrays
This paper proposes a new and very flexible data model, called gene expression graph (GEG), for genes expression analysis and classification. Three features differentiate GEGs from other available microarray data representation structures: (i) the memory occupation of a GEG is independent of the number of samples used to built it; (ii) a GEG more clearly expresses relationships among expressed and non expressed genes in both healthy and diseased tissues experiments; (iii) GEGs allow to easily implement very efficient classifiers. The paper also presents a simple classifier for sample-based classification to show the flexibility and user-friendliness of the proposed data structur
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