Analyzing gene expression time-courses
A. Schliep, I.G. Costa, C. Steinhoff and A. Schönhuth
IEEE/ACM Trans Comput Biol Bioinform 2005, 2:3, 179–193.
Measuring gene expression over time can provide important insights into basic cellular processes. Identifying groups of genes with similar expression time-courses is a crucial first step in the analysis. As biologically relevant groups frequently overlap, due to genes having several distinct roles in those cellular processes, this is a difficult problem for classical clustering methods. We use a mixture model to circumvent this principal problem, with hidden Markov models (HMMs) as effective and flexible components. We show that the ensuing estimation problem can be addressed with additional labeled data-partially supervised learning of mixtures-through a modification of the Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm. Good starting points for the mixture estimation are obtained through a modification to Bayesian model merging, which allows us to learn a collection of initial HMMs. We infer groups from mixtures with a simple information-theoretic decoding heuristic, which quantifies the level of ambiguity in group assignment. The effectiveness is shown with high-quality annotation data. As the HMMs we propose capture asynchronous behavior by design, the groups we find are also asynchronous. Synchronous subgroups are obtained from a novel algorithm based on Viterbi paths. We show the suitability of our HMM mixture approach on biological and simulated data and through the favorable comparison with previous approaches. A software implementing the method is freely available under the GPL from http://ghmm.org/gql.
A reprint is available as PDF.
Pubmed ID: 17044182. DOI: 10.1109/TCBB.2005.31.
The publication includes results from the following projects or software tools: GQL, GenExpTimecourses, GHMM.
The following presentation(s) are based on this publication: Jan. 13, 2006 by Ivan Costa at Bioinformatics Working Seminar of the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology (Invited Talk).
Further publications by Alexander Schliep, Ivan G Costa.