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Statistical Methods for Large-Scale Integrative Genomics

In the past 20 years, we have witnessed a significant advance of high-throughput genetic and genomic technologies. With the massively generated genomics data, there is a pressing need for statistical methods that can utilize them to make quantitative inference on substantive scientific questions. My research has been focusing on statistical methods for large-scale integrative genomics. The human genome encodes more than 20,000 genes, while the functions of about 50% (>10,000) genes remains unknown up to date. The determination of the functions of the poorly characterized genes is crucial for understanding biological processes and human diseases. In the era of Big Data, the availability of massive genomic data provides us unprecedented opportunity to identify the association between genes and predict their biological functions. Genome sequencing data and mRNA expression data are the two most important classes of genomic data. This thesis presents three research projects in self-contained chapters: (1) a statistical framework for inferring evolutionary history of human genes and identifying gene modules with shared evolutionary history from genome sequencing data, (2) a statistical method to predict frequent and specific gene co-expression by integrating a large number of mRNA expression datasets, and (3) robust variable and interaction selection for high-dimensional classification problem under the discriminant analysis and logistic regression model.

Chapter 1. Human has more than 20,000 genes but till now most of their functions are uncharacterized. Determination of the function for poorly characterized genes is crucial for understanding biological processes and study of human diseases. Functionally associated genes tend to gain and lose simultaneously during evolution, therefore identifying co-evolution of genes predicts gene-gene associations. In this chapter, we propose a mixture of tree-structured hidden Markov models for gene evolution process, and a Bayesian model-based clustering algorithm to detect gene modules with shared evolutionary history (named as evolutionary conserved modules, ECM). Dirichlet process prior is adopted for estimation of number of gene clusters and an efficient Gibbs sampler is developed for posterior distribution computation. By simulation study and benchmarks on real data sets, we show that our algorithm outperforms traditional methods that use simple metrics (e.g. Hamming distance, Pearson correlation) to measure the similarity between genes presence/absence patterns. We apply our methods on 1,025 canonical human pathways gene sets, and found a large portion of the detected gene associations are substantiated by other sources of evidence. The rest of genes have predicted functions of high priority to be verified by further biological experiments.

Chapter 2. The availability of gene expression measurements across thousands of experimental conditions provides the opportunity to predict gene function based on shared mRNA expression. While many biological complexes and pathways are coordinately expressed, their genes may be organized into co-expression modules with distinct patterns in certain tissues or conditions, which can provide insight into pathway organization and function. We developed the algorithm CLIC (clustering by inferred co-expression, www.gene-clic.org) that clusters a set of functionally-related genes into co-expressed modules, highlights the most relevant datasets, and predicts additional co-expressed genes. Using a statistical Bayesian partition model, CLIC simultaneously partitions the input gene set into disjoint co-expression modules and weights the most relevant datasets for each module. CLIC then expands each module with additional members that co-express with the module’s genes more than the background model in the weighted datasets. We applied CLIC to (i) model the background correlation in each of 3,662 mouse and human microarray datasets from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), (ii) partition each of 900 annotated complexes/pathways into co-expression modules, and (iii) expand each co-expression module with additional genes showing frequent and specific co-expression over multiple GEO datasets. CLIC provided very strong functional predictions for many completely uncharacterized genes, including a link between protein C7orf55 and the mitochondrial ATP synthase complex that we experimentally validated via CRISPR knock-out. CLIC software is freely available and should become increasingly powerful with the growing wealth of transcriptomic datasets.

Chapter 3. Discriminant analysis and logistic regression are fundamental tools for classification problems. Quadratic discriminant analysis has the ability to exploit interaction effects of predictors, but the selection of interaction terms is non-trivial and the Gaussian assumption is often too restrictive for many real problems. Under the logistic regression framework, we propose a forward-backward method, SODA, for variable selection with both main and quadratic interaction terms, where in the forward stage, a stepwise procedure is conducted to screen for important predictors with both main and interaction effects, and in the backward stage SODA remove insignificant terms so as to optimize the extended BIC (EBIC) criterion. Compared with existing methods on quadratic discriminant analysis variable selection (e.g., (Murphy et al., 2010), (Zhang and Wang, 2011) and (Maugis et al., 2011)), SODA can deal with high-dimensional data with the number of predictors much larger than the sample size and does not require the joint normality assumption on predictors, leading to much enhanced robustness. Theoretical analysis establishes the consistency of SODA under high-dimensional setting. Empirical performance of SODA is assessed on both simulated and real data and is found to be superior to all existing methods we have tested. For all the three real datasets we have studied, SODA selected more parsimonious models achieving higher classification accuracies compared to other tested methods. / Statistics

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:harvard.edu/oai:dash.harvard.edu:1/33493551
Date25 July 2017
CreatorsLi, Yang
ContributorsLiu, Jun S., Mootha, Vamsi K.
PublisherHarvard University
Source SetsHarvard University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis or Dissertation, text
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsopen

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