87 research outputs found

    Rotational Features Extraction for Ridge Detection

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    State-of-the-art approaches to detecting ridge-like structures in images rely on filters designed to respond to locally linear intensity features. While these approaches may be optimal for ridges whose appearance is close to being ideal, their performance degrades quickly in the presence of structured noise that corrupts the image signal, potentially to the point where it truly does not conform to the ideal model anymore. In this paper, we address this issue by introducing a learning framework that relies on rich, local, rotationally invariant image descriptors and demonstrate that we can outperform state-of-the-art ridge detectors in many different kinds of imagery. More specifically, our framework yields superior performance for the detection of blood vessel in retinal scans, dendrites in bright-field and confocal microscopy image-stacks, and streets in satellite imagery

    The effects of death and post-mortem cold ischemia on human tissue transcriptomes

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    Post-mortem tissues samples are a key resource for investigating patterns of gene expression. However, the processes triggered by death and the post-mortem interval (PMI) can significantly alter physiologically normal RNA levels. We investigate the impact of PMI on gene expression using data from multiple tissues of post-mortem donors obtained from the GTEx project. We find that many genes change expression over relatively short PMIs in a tissue-specific manner, but this potentially confounding effect in a biological analysis can be minimized by taking into account appropriate covariates. By comparing ante- and post-mortem blood samples, we identify the cascade of transcriptional events triggered by death of the organism. These events do not appear to simply reflect stochastic variation resulting from mRNA degradation, but active and ongoing regulation of transcription. Finally, we develop a model to predict the time since death from the analysis of the transcriptome of a few readily accessible tissues.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    The landscape of expression and alternative splicing variation across human traits

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    Understanding the consequences of individual transcriptome variation is fundamental to deciphering human biology and disease. We implement a statistical framework to quantify the contributions of 21 individual traits as drivers of gene expression and alternative splicing variation across 46 human tissues and 781 individuals from the Genotype-Tissue Expression project. We demonstrate that ancestry, sex, age, and BMI make additive and tissue-specific contributions to expression variability, whereas interactions are rare. Variation in splicing is dominated by ancestry and is under genetic control in most tissues, with ribosomal proteins showing a strong enrichment of tissue-shared splicing events. Our analyses reveal a systemic contribution of types 1 and 2 diabetes to tissue transcriptome variation with the strongest signal in the nerve, where histopathology image analysis identifies novel genes related to diabetic neuropathy. Our multi-tissue and multi-trait approach provides an extensive characterization of the main drivers of human transcriptome variation in health and disease.This study was funded by the HumTranscriptom project with reference PID2019-107937GA-I00. R.G.-P. was supported by a Juan de la Cierva fellowship (FJC2020-044119-I) funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and ‘‘European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR.’’ J.M.R. was supported by a predoctoral fellowship from ‘‘la Caixa’’ Foundation (ID 100010434) with code LCF/BQ/DR22/11950022. A.R.-C. was supported by a Formación Personal Investigador (FPI) fellowship (PRE2019-090193) funded by MCIN/AEI. R.C.-G. was supported by an FPI fellowship (PRE2020-092510) funded by MCIN/AEI. M.M. was supported by a Ramon y Cajal fellowship (RYC-2017-22249).Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Genetic subtypes of smoldering multiple myeloma are associated with distinct pathogenic phenotypes and clinical outcomes

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    Smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) is a precursor condition of multiple myeloma (MM) with significant heterogeneity in disease progression. Existing clinical models of progression risk do not fully capture this heterogeneity. Here we integrate 42 genetic alterations from 214 SMM patients using unsupervised binary matrix factorization (BMF) clustering and identify six distinct genetic subtypes. These subtypes are differentially associated with established MM-related RNA signatures, oncogenic and immune transcriptional profiles, and evolving clinical biomarkers. Three genetic subtypes are associated with increased risk of progression to active MM in both the primary and validation cohorts, indicating they can be used to better predict high and low-risk patients within the currently used clinical risk stratification models

    The impact of sex on gene expression across human tissues

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    Many complex human phenotypes exhibit sex-differentiated characteristics. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these differences remain largely unknown. We generated a catalog of sex differences in gene expression and in the genetic regulation of gene expression across 44 human tissue sources surveyed by the Genotype-Tissue Expression project (GTEx, v8 release). We demonstrate that sex influences gene expression levels and cellular composition of tissue samples across the human body. A total of 37% of all genes exhibit sex-biased expression in at least one tissue. We identify cis expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) with sex-differentiated effects and characterize their cellular origin. By integrating sex-biased eQTLs with genome-wide association study data, we identify 58 gene-trait associations that are driven by genetic regulation of gene expression in a single sex. These findings provide an extensive characterization of sex differences in the human transcriptome and its genetic regulation

    Modified penetrance of coding variants by cis-regulatory variation contributes to disease risk

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    Coding variants represent many of the strongest associations between genotype and phenotype; however, they exhibit interindividual differences in effect, termed 'variable penetrance'. Here, we study how cis-regulatory variation modifies the penetrance of coding variants. Using functional genomic and genetic data from the Genotype-Tissue Expression Project (GTEx), we observed that in the general population, purifying selection has depleted haplotype combinations predicted to increase pathogenic coding variant penetrance. Conversely, in cancer and autism patients, we observed an enrichment of penetrance increasing haplotype configurations for pathogenic variants in disease-implicated genes, providing evidence that regulatory haplotype configuration of coding variants affects disease risk. Finally, we experimentally validated this model by editing a Mendelian single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) using CRISPR/Cas9 on distinct expression haplotypes with the transcriptome as a phenotypic readout. Our results demonstrate that joint regulatory and coding variant effects are an important part of the genetic architecture of human traits and contribute to modified penetrance of disease-causing variants.Peer reviewe
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