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Genome-Wide Signatures of Transcription Factor Activity: Connecting Transcription Factors, Disease, and Small Molecules

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  • Jing Chen
  • Zhen Hu
  • Mukta Phatak
  • John Reichard
  • Johannes M Freudenberg
  • Siva Sivaganesan
  • Mario Medvedovic

Abstract

Identifying transcription factors (TF) involved in producing a genome-wide transcriptional profile is an essential step in building mechanistic model that can explain observed gene expression data. We developed a statistical framework for constructing genome-wide signatures of TF activity, and for using such signatures in the analysis of gene expression data produced by complex transcriptional regulatory programs. Our framework integrates ChIP-seq data and appropriately matched gene expression profiles to identify True REGulatory (TREG) TF-gene interactions. It provides genome-wide quantification of the likelihood of regulatory TF-gene interaction that can be used to either identify regulated genes, or as genome-wide signature of TF activity. To effectively use ChIP-seq data, we introduce a novel statistical model that integrates information from all binding “peaks” within 2 Mb window around a gene's transcription start site (TSS), and provides gene-level binding scores and probabilities of regulatory interaction. In the second step we integrate these binding scores and regulatory probabilities with gene expression data to assess the likelihood of True REGulatory (TREG) TF-gene interactions. We demonstrate the advantages of TREG framework in identifying genes regulated by two TFs with widely different distribution of functional binding events (ERα and E2f1). We also show that TREG signatures of TF activity vastly improve our ability to detect involvement of ERα in producing complex diseases-related transcriptional profiles. Through a large study of disease-related transcriptional signatures and transcriptional signatures of drug activity, we demonstrate that increase in statistical power associated with the use of TREG signatures makes the crucial difference in identifying key targets for treatment, and drugs to use for treatment. All methods are implemented in an open-source R package treg. The package also contains all data used in the analysis including 494 TREG binding profiles based on ENCODE ChIP-seq data. The treg package can be downloaded at http://GenomicsPortals.org.Author Summary: Knowing transcription factors (TF) that regulate expression of differentially expressed genes is essential for understanding signaling cascades and regulatory mechanisms that lead to changes in gene expression. We developed methods for constructing gene-level scores (TREG binding scores) measuring likelihood that the gene is regulated based on the generative statistical model of ChIP-seq data for all genes (TREG binding profile). We also developed methods for integrating TREG binding scores with appropriately matched gene expression data to create TREG signatures of the TF activity. We then use TREG binding profiles and TREG signatures to identify TFs involved in the disease-related gene expression profiles. Two main findings of our study are: 1) TREG binding scores derived from ChIP-seq data are more informative than simple alternatives that can be used to summarize ChIP-seq data; and 2) TREG signatures that integrate the binding and gene expression data are more sensitive in detecting evidence of TF regulatory activity than commonly used alternatives. We show that this advantage of TREG signatures can make the difference between being able and not being able to infer TF regulatory activity in complex transcriptional profiles. This increased sensitivity was critically important in establishing connections between disease and drug signatures.

Suggested Citation

  • Jing Chen & Zhen Hu & Mukta Phatak & John Reichard & Johannes M Freudenberg & Siva Sivaganesan & Mario Medvedovic, 2013. "Genome-Wide Signatures of Transcription Factor Activity: Connecting Transcription Factors, Disease, and Small Molecules," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(9), pages 1-12, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1003198
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003198
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    1. Caryn S. Ross-Innes & Rory Stark & Andrew E. Teschendorff & Kelly A. Holmes & H. Raza Ali & Mark J. Dunning & Gordon D. Brown & Ondrej Gojis & Ian O. Ellis & Andrew R. Green & Simak Ali & Suet-Feung C, 2012. "Differential oestrogen receptor binding is associated with clinical outcome in breast cancer," Nature, Nature, vol. 481(7381), pages 389-393, January.
    2. Kendall Powell, 2012. "Molecular oncology: The positive in the negative," Nature, Nature, vol. 485(7400), pages 52-53, May.
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