4.7 Article

Molecular heterogeneity at the network level: high-dimensional testing, clustering and a TCGA case study

Journal

BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 33, Issue 18, Pages 2890-2896

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btx322

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NCI P30 CA016672, U54HG008100, UO1CA168394, U24CA199461]
  2. UK Medical Research Council [MC_UP_1302/1, MC_UP_1302/3]
  3. Medical Research Council [MC_UU_00002/2, MC_UP_1302/3] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. MRC [MC_UP_1302/3, MC_UU_00002/2] Funding Source: UKRI

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Motivation: Molecular pathways and networks play a key role in basic and disease biology. An emerging notion is that networks encoding patterns of molecular interplay may themselves differ between contexts, such as cell type, tissue or disease (sub)type. However, while statistical testing of differences in mean expression levels has been extensively studied, testing of network differences remains challenging. Furthermore, since network differences could provide important and biologically interpretable information to identify molecular subgroups, there is a need to consider the unsupervised task of learning subgroups and networks that define them. This is a nontrivial clustering problem, with neither subgroups nor subgroup-specific networks known at the outset. Results: We leverage recent ideas from high-dimensional statistics for testing and clustering in the network biology setting. The methods we describe can be applied directly to most continuous molecular measurements and networks do not need to be specified beforehand. We illustrate the ideas and methods in a case study using protein data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). This provides evidence that patterns of interplay between signalling proteins differ significantly between cancer types. Furthermore, we show how the proposed approaches can be used to learn subtypes and the molecular networks that define them. Availability and implementation: As the Bioconductor package nethet. Contact: staedler.n@gmail.com or sach.mukherjee@dzne.de Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

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