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the impact of multifunctional genes on guilt by association analysis多功能基因牵连的影响分析.pdf

发布:2017-09-08约11.08万字共16页下载文档
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The Impact of Multifunctional Genes on Guilt by Association Analysis Jesse Gillis1,2, Paul Pavlidis 1,2* 1 Centre for High-Throughput Biology, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, 2 Michael Smith Laboratories, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Abstract Many previous studies have shown that by using variants of ‘‘guilt-by-association’’, gene function predictions can be made with very high statistical confidence. In these studies, it is assumed that the ‘‘associations’’ in the data (e.g., protein interaction partners) of a gene are necessary in establishing ‘‘guilt’’. In this paper we show that multifunctionality, rather than association, is a primary driver of gene function prediction. We first show that knowledge of the degree of multifunctionality alone can produce astonishingly strong performance when used as a predictor of gene function. We then demonstrate how multifunctionality is encoded in gene interaction data (such as protein interactions and coexpression networks) and how this can feed forward into gene function prediction algorithms. We find that high-quality gene function predictions can be made using data that possesses no information on which gene interacts with which. By examining a wide range of networks from mouse, human and yeast, as well as multiple prediction methods and evaluation metrics, we provide evidence that this problem is pervasive and does not reflect the failings of any particular algorithm or data type. We propose computational controls that can be used to provide more meaningful control when estimating gene function prediction performance. We suggest that this source of bias due to multifunctionality is important to control for, wi
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