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ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional

Modern genomic data sets often involve multiple data-layers (e.g., DNA-sequence, gene expression), each of which itself can be high-dimensional. The biological processes underlying these data-layers can lead to intricate multivariate association patterns. We propose and evaluate two methods to deter...

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Autores principales: de los Campos, Gustavo, Pook, Torsten, Gonzalez-Reymundez, Agustin, Simianer, Henner, Mias, George, Vazquez, Ana I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7735570/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33315963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243251
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author de los Campos, Gustavo
Pook, Torsten
Gonzalez-Reymundez, Agustin
Simianer, Henner
Mias, George
Vazquez, Ana I.
author_facet de los Campos, Gustavo
Pook, Torsten
Gonzalez-Reymundez, Agustin
Simianer, Henner
Mias, George
Vazquez, Ana I.
author_sort de los Campos, Gustavo
collection PubMed
description Modern genomic data sets often involve multiple data-layers (e.g., DNA-sequence, gene expression), each of which itself can be high-dimensional. The biological processes underlying these data-layers can lead to intricate multivariate association patterns. We propose and evaluate two methods to determine the proportion of variance of an output data set that can be explained by an input data set when both data panels are high dimensional. Our approach uses random-effects models to estimate the proportion of variance of vectors in the linear span of the output set that can be explained by regression on the input set. We consider a method based on an orthogonal basis (Eigen-ANOVA) and one that uses random vectors (Monte Carlo ANOVA, MC-ANOVA) in the linear span of the output set. Using simulations, we show that the MC-ANOVA method gave nearly unbiased estimates. Estimates produced by Eigen-ANOVA were also nearly unbiased, except when the shared variance was very high (e.g., >0.9). We demonstrate the potential insight that can be obtained from the use of MC-ANOVA and Eigen-ANOVA by applying these two methods to the study of multi-locus linkage disequilibrium in chicken (Gallus gallus) genomes and to the assessment of inter-dependencies between gene expression, methylation, and copy-number-variants in data from breast cancer tumors from humans (Homo sapiens). Our analyses reveal that in chicken breeding populations ~50,000 evenly-spaced SNPs are enough to fully capture the span of whole-genome-sequencing genomes. In the study of multi-omic breast cancer data, we found that the span of copy-number-variants can be fully explained using either methylation or gene expression data and that roughly 74% of the variance in gene expression can be predicted from methylation data.
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spelling pubmed-77355702020-12-22 ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional de los Campos, Gustavo Pook, Torsten Gonzalez-Reymundez, Agustin Simianer, Henner Mias, George Vazquez, Ana I. PLoS One Research Article Modern genomic data sets often involve multiple data-layers (e.g., DNA-sequence, gene expression), each of which itself can be high-dimensional. The biological processes underlying these data-layers can lead to intricate multivariate association patterns. We propose and evaluate two methods to determine the proportion of variance of an output data set that can be explained by an input data set when both data panels are high dimensional. Our approach uses random-effects models to estimate the proportion of variance of vectors in the linear span of the output set that can be explained by regression on the input set. We consider a method based on an orthogonal basis (Eigen-ANOVA) and one that uses random vectors (Monte Carlo ANOVA, MC-ANOVA) in the linear span of the output set. Using simulations, we show that the MC-ANOVA method gave nearly unbiased estimates. Estimates produced by Eigen-ANOVA were also nearly unbiased, except when the shared variance was very high (e.g., >0.9). We demonstrate the potential insight that can be obtained from the use of MC-ANOVA and Eigen-ANOVA by applying these two methods to the study of multi-locus linkage disequilibrium in chicken (Gallus gallus) genomes and to the assessment of inter-dependencies between gene expression, methylation, and copy-number-variants in data from breast cancer tumors from humans (Homo sapiens). Our analyses reveal that in chicken breeding populations ~50,000 evenly-spaced SNPs are enough to fully capture the span of whole-genome-sequencing genomes. In the study of multi-omic breast cancer data, we found that the span of copy-number-variants can be fully explained using either methylation or gene expression data and that roughly 74% of the variance in gene expression can be predicted from methylation data. Public Library of Science 2020-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7735570/ /pubmed/33315963 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243251 Text en © 2020 de los Campos et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
de los Campos, Gustavo
Pook, Torsten
Gonzalez-Reymundez, Agustin
Simianer, Henner
Mias, George
Vazquez, Ana I.
ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title_full ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title_fullStr ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title_full_unstemmed ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title_short ANOVA-HD: Analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
title_sort anova-hd: analysis of variance when both input and output layers are high-dimensional
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7735570/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33315963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243251
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