Combining transcription factor binding affinities with open-chromatin data for accurate gene expression prediction
By
Florian Schmidt,
Nina Gasparoni,
Nina Gasparoni,
Kathrin Gianmoena,
Cristina Cadenas,
Julia K. Polansky,
Peter Ebert,
Karl Nordström,
Matthias Barann,
Anupam Sinha,
Sebastian Fröhler,
Jieyi Xiong,
Azim Dehghani Amirabad,
Fatemeh Behjati Ardakani,
Barbara Hutter,
Gideon Zipprich,
Bärbel Felder,
Jürgen Eils,
Benedikt Brors,
Wei Chen,
Jan G. Hengstler,
Alf Hamann,
Thomas Lengauer,
Philip Rosenstiel,
Joern Walter,
Marcel H. Schulz
Posted 19 Oct 2016
bioRxiv DOI: 10.1101/081935
(published DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkw1061)
The binding and contribution of transcription factors (TF) to cell specific gene expression is often deduced from open-chromatin measurements to avoid costly TF ChIP-seq assays. Thus, it is important to develop computational methods for accurate TF binding prediction in open-chromatin regions (OCRs). Here, we report a novel segmentation-based method, TEPIC, to predict TF binding by combining sets of OCRs with position weight matrices. TEPIC can be applied to various open-chromatin data, e.g. DNaseI-seq and NOMe-seq. Additionally, Histone-Marks (HMs) can be used to identify candidate TF binding sites. TEPIC computes TF affinities and uses open-chromatin/HM signal intensity as quantitative measures of TF binding strength. Using machine learning, we find low affinity binding sites to improve our ability to explain gene expression variability compared to the standard presence/absence classification of binding sites. Further, we show that both footprints and peaks capture essential TF binding events and lead to a good prediction performance. In our application, gene-based scores computed by TEPIC with one open-chromatin assay nearly reach the quality of several TF ChIP-seq datasets. Finally, these scores correctly predict known transcriptional regulators as illustrated by the application to novel DNaseI-seq and NOMe-seq data for primary human hepatocytes and CD4+ T-cells, respectively.
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