4.5 Article

SNP Selection and Classification of Genome-Wide SNP Data Using Stratified Sampling Random Forests

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NANOBIOSCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 216-227

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNB.2012.2214232

Keywords

Genome-wide association study; SNP; random forest; stratified sampling

Funding

  1. NSFC [61073195]
  2. Shenzhen Science and Technology Program [CXB201005250024A]
  3. Centre for Mathematical Imaging and Vision, HKRGC [201812]
  4. HKBU FRG Grant

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For high dimensional genome-wide association (GWA) case-control data of complex disease, there are usually a large portion of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are irrelevant with the disease. A simple random sampling method in random forest using default parameter to choose feature subspace, will select too many subspaces without informative SNPs. Exhaustive searching an optimal is often required in order to include useful and relevant SNPs and get rid of vast of non-informative SNPs. However, it is too time-consuming and not favorable in GWA for high-dimensional data. The main aim of this paper is to propose a stratified sampling method for feature subspace selection to generate decision trees in a random forest for GWA high-dimensional data. Our idea is to design an equal-width discretization scheme for informativeness to divide SNPs into multiple groups. In feature subspace selection, we randomly select the same number of SNPs from each group and combine them to form a subspace to generate a decision tree. The advantage of this stratified sampling procedure can make sure each subspace contains enough useful SNPs, but can avoid a very high computational cost of exhaustive search of an optimal, and maintain the randomness of a random forest. We employ two genome-wide SNP data sets (Parkinson case-control data comprised of 408 803 SNPs and Alzheimer case-control data comprised of 380 157 SNPs) to demonstrate that the proposed stratified sampling method is effective, and it can generate better random forest with higher accuracy and lower error bound than those by Breiman's random forest generation method. For Parkinson data, we also show some interesting genes identified by the method, which may be associated with neurological disorders for further biological investigations.

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