Abstract

Background

One of the major challenges in the analysis of gene expression data is to identify local patterns composed of genes showing coherent expression across subsets of experimental conditions. Such patterns may provide an understanding of underlying biological processes related to these conditions. This understanding can further be improved by providing concise characterizations of the genes and situations delimiting the pattern.

Results

We propose a method called semantic biclustering with the aim to detect interpretable rectangular patterns in binary data matrices. As usual in biclustering, we seek homogeneous submatrices, however, we also require that the included elements can be jointly described in terms of semantic annotations pertaining to both rows (genes) and columns (samples). To find such interpretable biclusters, we explore two strategies. The first endows an existing biclustering algorithm with the semantic ingredients. The other is based on rule and tree learning known from machine learning.

Conclusions

The two alternatives are tested in experiments with two Drosophila melanogaster gene expression datasets. Both strategies are shown to detect sets of compact biclusters with semantic descriptions that also remain largely valid for unseen (testing) data. This desirable generalization aspect is more emphasized in the strategy stemming from conventional biclustering although this is traded off by the complexity of the descriptions (number of ontology terms employed), which, on the other hand, is lower for the alternative strategy.

Details

Title
Semantic biclustering for finding local, interpretable and predictive expression patterns
Author
Kléma, Jiří; Malinka, František; železný, Filip
Pages
41-53
Section
Research
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712164
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2348277891
Copyright
© 2017. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.