Carnegie Mellon University
Browse
jxiang_MachineLearning_2017.pdf (5.56 MB)

Statistical Approach for Functionally Validating Transcription Factor Bindings Using Population SNP and Gene Expression Data

Download (5.56 MB)
thesis
posted on 2019-10-18, 20:02 authored by Jing XiangJing Xiang
Understanding transcriptional gene regulation is an important step to understanding how essential mechanisms are controlled in biological systems. Functional assays
such as ChIP-seq and DNase I have been used to obtain a binding map of transcription factor (TF) binding sites on DNA and to determine the transcriptional regulatory network of TFs and their target genes. However, binding alone may not
result in a change in target gene expression. Experimental approaches to identifying functional binding events involve performing artificial TF knockdown experiments
or genome editing [31, 45, 70] and then declaring the differentially expressed genes as functionally validated target genes. Instead of artificial perturbation, in order to functionally validate the TF binding map, we propose to leverage the naturally occurring genetic variations as the source of perturbations that vary gene expressions and to analyze population single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and gene expression data. Experimental approaches typically target either a single TF or a family of TFs. In addition, in a single experiment, you must choose whether to perturb TF concentration through RNA interference or CRISPR interference, or TF binding affinity through genome editing. However, our approach is potentially more powerful
because any aspects of the TF-target interaction, including TF concentration and TF binding affinity, can be perturbed by a large number of SNPs found across the genome simultaneously and the effects are learned in a single analysis. In this thesis, we first introduce a statistical approach, based on conditional Gaussian Bayesian networks, that integrates population SNP and gene expression data with TF binding data to validate the TF binding map. We developed an efficient
learning algorithm for learning the gene regulatory network by using TF binding data as prior knowledge, and selecting the TF-target interactions that are validated based on population SNP and gene-expression data. Given the estimated network, we perform inference on the estimated probabilistic graphical models to determine downstream genes that are differentially expressed due to the effect of the TF-target interactions. We apply our method to learn transcriptional regulatory networks in lymphoblastoid
cell lines (LCLs) and breast cancer tumours. First, we demonstrate our approach for validation of the TF binding map derived from ENCODE DNase I and ChIPseq
data from 71 TFs in LCLs, with SNP and gene expression data from the 1000 genomes and HapMap 3 projects respectively. We examined functional target genes
that were validated under perturbation of TF concentration and TF binding affinity. Finally, we apply our method to perform TF binding map validation for ER and its
coregulators which include 38 TFs obtained from Cistrome TF binding data, by using The Cancer Genome Atlas SNP and expression data from breast cancer tumors.
We identified many previously known interactions between ER and its coregulators. We also found expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) in local binding regions of
target genes that are potential super enhancers and eQTLs in coding regions that may affect the protein structure of important regulators.

History

Date

2017-09-01

Degree Type

  • Dissertation

Department

  • Machine Learning

Degree Name

  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Advisor(s)

Seyoung Kim