6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bb464

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Detection of condition-specific marker genes from RNA-seq data with MGFR

Gregorio Alanis-lobatoNancy MahAndreas KurtzKhadija El AmraniMiguel A. Andrade-navarro

subject

Bioinformaticslcsh:MedicineRNA-SeqComputational biologyMarker genesCell fate determinationBiologyMarker geneGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTranscriptomeBioconductor03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGene expressionSingle cellRNA-SeqTranscriptomicsGene030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesGeneral Neurosciencelcsh:RCell-type specificityGenomicsGeneral MedicineTissue specificity030220 oncology & carcinogenesisGene expressionR-packageDNA microarrayGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences

description

The identification of condition-specific genes is key to advancing our understanding of cell fate decisions and disease development. Differential gene expression analysis (DGEA) has been the standard tool for this task. However, the amount of samples that modern transcriptomic technologies allow us to study, makes DGEA a daunting task. On the other hand, experiments with low numbers of replicates lack the statistical power to detect differentially expressed genes. We have previously developed MGFM, a tool for marker gene detection from microarrays, that is particularly useful in the latter case. Here, we have adapted the algorithm behind MGFM to detect markers in RNA-seq data. MGFR groups samples with similar gene expression levels and flags potential markers of a sample type if their highest expression values represent all replicates of this type. We have benchmarked MGFR against other methods and found that its proposed markers accurately characterize the functional identity of different tissues and cell types in standard and single cell RNA-seq datasets. Then, we performed a more detailed analysis for three of these datasets, which profile the transcriptomes of different human tissues, immune and human blastocyst cell types, respectively. MGFR’s predicted markers were compared to gold-standard lists for these datasets and outperformed the other marker detectors. Finally, we suggest novel candidate marker genes for the examined tissues and cell types. MGFR is implemented as a freely available Bioconductor package (https://doi.org/doi:10.18129/B9.bioc.MGFR), which facilitates its use and integration with bioinformatics pipelines.

https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6970