Skip to main content

Searching for differentially expressed gene combinations

Abstract

We propose 'CorScor', a novel approach for identifying gene pairs with joint differential expression. This is defined as a situation with good phenotype discrimination in the bivariate, but not in the two marginal distributions. CorScor can be used to detect phenotype-related dependencies and interactions among genes. Our easily interpretable approach is scalable to current microarray dimensions and yields promising results on several cancer-gene-expression datasets.

Background

Gene-expression monitoring by microarray technologies has become an important approach in biological and medical research over the past decade. A common experimental design is the comparison of two sets of samples from different phenotypes (diseases and normal tissue), with the goal of searching for genes showing differential expression. This is usually done via statistical testing procedures and, often, subsequent multiple testing corrections. Prominent examples include t-testing, significance analysis of microarrays [1], and empirical Bayes analysis [2]. A comprehensive review of such approaches can be found in Pan [3]. All these methods use a one-gene-at-a-time strategy, considering only the association between single genes and the phenotype.

Many approaches for classification of phenotypes using microarrays do consider multiple genes simultaneously, but they address a different question, as their goal is to produce sets of differentially expressed genes for use in class prediction [48]. While interesting, these approaches have the limitation that they cannot be applied comprehensively to all possible pairs, that is, there currently are no practical tools for exploring phenotype-related dependencies and interactions among all gene pairs in large datasets. In this paper we present a methodology for addressing this issue, and we show that it can find interesting biological relationships that would be missed by existing approaches.

We are interested in searching for two types of gene pairs, illustrated in Figure 1 by artificial examples. In the left panel, the two genes show a pronounced joint association on the phenotype: if the sum of their expression levels exceeds 3 units, we observe solely the blue-triangle phenotype. A biological mechanism leading to this phenomenon may occur when the two genes are substitutes in a molecular process that is closely linked to the phenotype. Therefore, we denote this situation as the 'substitution case'. Neither of the two genes shows a strong association with the phenotype in the univariate marginal distribution, and thus both would have been highly unlikely to appear in a gene list produced by a one-gene-at-a-time testing approach. A complementary case occurs when two genes cluster around two positively sloped axes: then the phenotype is associated with a difference in expression, a situation we refer to as the 'gap case'.

Figure 1
figure 1

Two artificial examples of joint differential gene expression. The units of the x-axis and y-axis are gene expression; blue triangles and red circles represent samples of two different phenotypes. The inner panels reflect the joint distribution; the outer margins display the univariate marginal distributions. The dashed lines represent the first principal components, conditional on the phenotype.

A more complex case is shown in our second artificial example, in the right panel of Figure 1. There is no obvious demarcation in space and, again, neither of the two genes carries information on its own. However, together they do. Biologically speaking, this example could reflect an 'on/off situation'. If both genes are off (expression values below 1.5 units), or both genes are on (expression value above 1.5 units), we observe the red-circle phenotype. In contrast, if only one of the genes is turned on, the blue-triangle phenotype is predominant.

Statistically, we define joint differential expression as good phenotype discrimination by the joint distribution, but not by the univariate marginal distributions of two genes. From a functional genomics perspective, such pairs could represent interesting novel biological interactions, as for example genes that are in the same pathway.

The identification of gene pairs with joint differential expression is ambitious for several reasons. First, gene pair identification is subject to the curse of dimensionality. While the usual number p of genes is in the tens of thousands, the number of gene pairs is p(p-1)/2, usually in the millions. Second, there are no existing and quickly computable test statistics that exactly address our notion of joint differential expression. Existing bivariate tests such as Hotelling's T2 [9] only screen for differences in the bivariate mean vectors and will thus favor pairs that consist of genes with strong marginal effects. Third, identifying joint differential expression based on comparing predictive models for pairs and single genes is conceptually sound but is unattractive because of its prohibitive computational burden.

Here we propose a novel, efficient, and scalable approach for searching gene pairs with joint differential expression. It relies on calculating an appropriately defined test statistic from the unconditional as well as the class-conditional correlation matrices. Therefore, we call our method CorScor, as a shorthand for correlation scoring. Its biggest advantages are its straightforward interpretation and the fact that it can be calculated very quickly, which allows for an exhaustive search among the millions of pairs even in large gene-expression datasets. On the basis of several gene-expression datasets from the literature, we illustrate our method and collect empirical evidence that it yields gene pairs that have a tendency to share biological relationships.

Results

Data preparation

We illustrate the power and utility of our method with a comprehensive analysis of two datasets, and display the results for two further problems in the additional data files section. The first dataset discussed in detail is from a publicly available study on colon cancer by Alon et al. [10, 11]. It originated from Affymetrix Hum6000 arrays and contains the expression values of the 2,000 genes with highest minimal intensity across 62 colon tissues, 40 of which were tumorous and 22 of which were normal. We transformed the data by a base 10 log-transformation and standardized each array to zero mean and unit variance across genes. The second is a publicly available breast cancer dataset from Hedenfalk et al. [12, 13]. The data were obtained from Stanford-type cDNA microarrays, monitoring 2,654 genes across 22 breast cancer samples, 7 of which were found to carry germline BRCA1 mutations. Normalization was carried out following the approach of Yang et al. [14]. Our selection of data illustrates that CorScor works independently of the platform. We require accurately preprocessed expression data from n samples and p genes, stored in an (n × p) matrix denoted by (x ig ). In what follows, we will encode the phenotype information generically as 0 and 1, and store it in the n-dimensional response variable y.

The gap/substitution cases

Our method for revealing genes with joint differential expression relies on computing a simple score function. Given a pair consisting of genes g and g', we determine a measure of pairwise dependence ρ(g,g') among their expression vectors. Next, by restricting in turn to just the samples from each phenotype, we obtain both class-conditional measures of dependence ρ0(g,g') and ρ1(g,g').

For finding gene pairs that jointly discriminate the two phenotypes according to a gap or substitution mechanism as shown by the artificial example in the left panel of Figure 1, we recommend computing the scoring function

S(ρ,ρ0,ρ1) = | ρ0 + ρ1 - αρ |     (1)

for all gene pairs (g,g'), using the Pearson correlation coefficient as dependence measure. Note that the operations in function (1) can be done for all gene pairs simultaneously by element-wise operations on three (p × p) matrices. As illustrated in Figure 2, gene pairs with high scores indeed show good joint differential expression on the colon and BRCA1 data, that is, accurate phenotype discrimination and comparably uninformative marginals. Some of the gene pairs we found are correlated in one group but not in the other. While this behavior does not exactly match the prototype example from Figure 1, it still fits our definition of joint differential expression. Moreover, this loss of coregulation can be a biologically relevant feature.

Figure 2
figure 2

Six examples of joint differential gene expression of the gap/substitution type, obtained from the colon and BRCA1 datasets. The inner panels show the joint distribution; the outer margins display the univariate distributions. Blue triangles stand for cancers in colon and BRCA1 mutants in breast; the red circles stand for normal samples in colon and sporadic cancers in breast. The dashed lines represent the conditional first principal components.

The rationale for the success of scoring function (1) is as follows. High conditional correlations arise if the data points within each group are tightly aligned along a straight line, which can be represented by the first principal components, shown in Figure 2 by the dashed lines. Good joint differential expression requires such tight clustering and close-to-parallel axis alignment. Hence, high conditional correlations with concordant sign, and also a shift between the alignment axes, are necessary. The bigger this shift, and thus the clearer the joint separation, the lower the unconditional correlation ρ gets. Hence, we diminish the sum of ρ0 and ρ1 by αρ. By taking the absolute value, we achieve symmetric treatment of positively and negatively sloped alignment axes, that is, we can capture the gap and the substitution cases together. The scalar tuning parameter α governs the balance between separation and parallel alignment. We observed empirically good results with α [1, 2], and use α = 1.5 throughout the paper.

The first three columns in Table 1 show the values of ρ, ρ0, ρ1, and and the scoring function S for the three highest-scoring gene pairs according to the scoring function (1). As expected, the class-conditional correlations ρ0 and ρ1 tend to be high in absolute value and concordant in their signs, whereas the overall correlation is low, and sometimes even has a discordant sign.

Table 1 Correlation coefficients and CorScor values for the gap/substitution scenario

A concise visualization of the scores of gene pairs with joint differential expression is a heat map, as shown in Figure 3. We select the first 50 genes involved in the top-ranked gene pairs and color-code the score for all 502/2 = 1,250 gene pairs from black (low value) through shaded grey to white (high value, excellent joint differential expression). Rows and columns of this symmetric matrix are rearranged according to a hierarchical clustering, such that genes that share common joint differential expression properties lie adjacent. We hypothesize that clustered genes may tend to share biological relationship. An exploratory analysis on the colon data supports this: the most prominent feature is a group of genes that can be found at positions 39 to 45 of the matrix. It consists of the genes with HUGO symbols GSN, ACTN1, SPARCL1, ITGA7, TPM1, and COL6A2.

Figure 3
figure 3

Symmetric heat map of CorScor values from Equation (1), for the colon and BRCA1 data. Columns and rows are rearranged according to a hierarchical clustering. Displayed are the 50 genes that are involved in the pairs with the highest scores. Black stands for low, grey for intermediate, and white for high score.

Three of these six genes (GSN, ACTN1, and SPARCL1) share a common annotation in the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway database (KEGG [15]). They are all involved in the 'regulation of actin cytoskeleton'. The remaining three genes lack pathway annotation in KEGG, but an analysis of their Gene Ontology terms (GO [16]) still reveals a functional connection: TPM1 has the GO terms 'actin binding' and 'cytoskeleton'. SPARCL1 is involved in 'calcium ion binding', a term it shares with GSN and ACTN1.

The heat map of the BRCA1 data, shown in the right panel of Figure 3, does not show an equally pronounced block structure. The absence of KEGG annotation for a large proportion of the genes makes it challenging to carry out the same type of validation. However, consistent with the known DNA-binding function of the BRCA1 gene [17], many of the genes are related to binding activities. For a full overview of the genes involved in the heat maps, we refer readers to our supplementary web page [18].

Our findings on the colon data illustrate that CorScor has the potential to bring up gene pairs with a functional relationship, and that our heat maps are a helpful visualization tool for grouping and detecting the most important ones among them. The major benefit of CorScor, compared with established clustering techniques based on the expression values of single genes, is that we are able to capture genes without strong marginal effects. The genes involved in our pairs do not show pronounced fold changes across the phenotypes, but nevertheless seem to be key in molecular processes closely linked to the phenotype.

The on/off-case

Another scenario in which joint differential expression is important is illustrated with the artificial example in the right panel of Figure 1. While the marginal distributions are not informative, the joint distribution clearly is: one phenotype is prevalent when the expression of both genes is either turned on or turned off, whereas the other phenotype is predominant when only one of the genes is expressed. An effective scoring function to capture these gene pairs is

S(ρ,ρ0,ρ1) = | ρ1 - ρ0 |,     (2)

the difference of the class-conditional dependence measures ρ0 and ρ1. We use Spearman's rank correlations in (2), because this prevents outlier-driven situations from appearing among the top gene pairs. Table 2 shows the values of ρ0, ρ1 and S for the top-scoring gene pairs in the colon and BRCA1 data. We observe fairly high conditional correlations here, which is partly caused by the use of Spearman's rank correlation.

Table 2 Correlation coefficients and CorScor values for the on/off scenario

Figure 4 shows scatterplots of the highest-scoring gene pairs on the colon and BRCA1 data. Joint differential expression is clearly present and an interesting biological interpretation can be derived from these scatterplots. As an example, we discuss the best-scoring gene pair from the BRCA1 data: for the wild-type samples (represented by red circles), there is a high positive correlation between TAF12, a gene that is related to transcription initiation, and RB1, a transcription inhibitor. For the BRCA1 mutant samples, the situation is reversed and the two genes show a strong negative correlation. This observation suggests a specific nuclear pathway that may be distorted as a result of BRCA1 mutations.

Figure 4
figure 4

Six examples of joint differential gene expression according to the on/off-scenario, obtained from the colon and BRCA1 data. The inner panels show the joint distribution; the outer margins display the univariate distributions. Blue triangles stand for cancerous and BRCA1 mutants, the red circles for normal and BRCA1 wild types, respectively. The dashed lines represent the direction of the conditional first principal components.

We emphasize again that because of the very different scope, such findings could not be made with one-at-a-time gene selection and/or hierarchical clustering based on gene-expression values. Again, for this on/off-scenario, the full information and annotation of the genes that are involved in the most promising gene pairs are available from our supplementary website [18].

Permutation analysis

Next, we address the question of whether and how many gene pairs achieve promising score values by chance alone. We do this by performing permutation-based empirical Bayes analysis [2]. We generate 100 noise gene-expression datasets by scrambling the phenotype labels. We then run CorScor on each of these 100 noise datasets, obtain a vector of score values with length p(p-1)/2 and rank their values. By taking the average within rank over the 100 permutations, we obtain an estimated null distribution of CorScor values.

The histograms in Figure 5 display the right tail of the permutation distribution to the right of the 95% quantile. The dashed vertical lines mark the score value of the top three gene pairs (shown in Figures 2 and 4) on both the gap/substitution and the on/off situation, and for both datasets. For the top gene pairs, we also give the fraction of null scores that exceed the observed values, which is an approximation to the empirical false-discovery rate. The permutation distribution has a somewhat heavier tail and slower decay for the on/off situation. Furthermore, when comparing the colon and BRCA1 permutation scores, we observe that the latter have higher values. This is caused by the difference in sample size. When we arbitrarily restricted the colon dataset to the same size as the BRCA1 dataset, the score values were in the same range (data not shown).

Figure 5
figure 5

Histograms displaying the right tail of the permutation distributions of CorScor in the colon and BRCA1 data. The dashed vertical lines indicate the score values of the top three gene pairs from Figures 2 and 4. Also reported is the fraction of null scores (tail.p) that exceed each of observed values.

Table 3 shows the number of gene pairs that exceed a given quantile of the permutation distribution, together with the ratio of observed versus expected number of gene pairs exceeding these quantiles. Again here, we observe that in the gap/substitution scenario, more gene pairs reach very high significance levels. In general, our results confirm that it is unlikely that the gene pairs we report have their joint differential expression due to chance alone.

Table 3 Gene pairs exceeding quantiles

Comparison with predictive modeling

Next, we contrast the results of searching for jointly differentially expressed gene pairs by CorScor to an alternative search based on predictive modeling, implemented with logistic regression. This is also a novel method, although some ideas in this direction were presented in a conference talk by P. Wirapati [19]. The predictive-modeling approach is far more computer intensive and currently not applicable to arrays with tens of thousands of features. We chose the following procedure for our predictive-modeling search. In the gap/substitution situation and for each gene pair (g,g'), we fitted three logistic regression models: a model with both genes as additive inputs to capture bivariate differential expression, and two univariate models with each gene as input to capture the marginal separation. This generates conditional probability estimates p i (x g , x g' ), p i (x g ), and p i (x g' ) for each observation i. We then compute three log-likelihoods on the basis of these probabilities,

The log-likelihood is a very natural measure for the amount of discrimination in binary problems. A gene pair with good joint differential expression reflecting a gap or substitution should show good discrimination for the bivariate model but comparably poor discrimination for the single-gene models. Hence, we can define a scoring function based on predictive modeling as

The left two panels in Figure 6 show scatterplots of CorScor's outcome versus predictive-modeling scores in the gap/substitution situation. The correlation between the two measures is 0.39 for the colon data, and 0.30 for the BRCA1 data.

Figure 6
figure 6

Comparison of CorScor and predictive modeling scores. Density plots for a comparison of the gap/substitution scoring function from correlation scoring defined in Equation (1) and predictive modeling (Equation (4)), as well as the on/off objective measures defined in Equations (2) and (5). Each panel is divided into a 50-×-50-cell grid. The darker the color of a cell, the more instances are therein. In the figure header, cor is the Pearson correlation coefficient between the CorScor and the respective predictive modeling scores.

The on/off-scenario requires a different approach. For each gene pair (g,g'), we chose to measure the improvement in predictive accuracy when comparing a full two-gene interaction model versus a two-gene additive model. This requires generating conditional probability estimates p i (x g ,x g' ,x gg' ) and p i (x g , x g' ) using logistic regression for each observation i. These are then plugged into the log-likelihood from (3). From these, we can obtain a predictive-modeling-based scoring function for the on/off scenario via

T(g,g') = l(y,p(x g ,x g' ,x gg' )) - l(y,p(x g ,x g' ))     (5)

The concordance of this measure with CorScor's output is illustrated in the right two panels of Figure 6. We observe a correlation of 0.54 in the colon data and 0.29 in the BRCA1 data, but many of CorScor's top-scoring gene pairs are not identified by predictive modeling.

For further investigation of these differences between CorScor and logistic regression, we performed a simulation study that makes it possible to judge differences in the power for detecting joint differential expression. We adopt a scenario similar to the colon data, with two phenotypes of 22 and 40 samples each. For the gap/substitution situation, the gene expressions for the two phenotypes are simulated independently according to a bivariate normal distribution with conditional correlations of 0.6. The amount of joint differential expression is controlled via a shift in the means on both axes, staggered at

standard deviations. We consider the gene pairs without mean shift (and thus with overlapping data point clouds) as the null situation without joint differential expression. The situation with standard deviations of mean shift approximately corresponds to the amount of joint differential expression in the best gene pairs from the colon data. We generated 100 such gene pairs, determined the score values for CorScor and logistic regression, and display the ability of detecting joint differential expression with receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves in Figure 7. We observe that logistic regression does better for the slight mean shifts, but for a moderate to large amount of joint differential expression, the two methods perform equally well.

Figure 7
figure 7

Power analysis for detecting joint differential expression. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves that display the fraction of false positives, or discriminatory ability, in our simulation study to detect joint differential expression. The left panel summarizes information about the gap/substitution scenario; the right panel is about the on/off scenario. The solid lines correspond to CorScor, and the dashed ones, to logistic regression. Finally, the strength of joint differential expression was set at five different levels in our simulation experiment. The yellow lines are for the weakest amount of joint differential expression and the black lines, for the strongest amount.

For the on/off-scenario, the gene expressions for the two phenotypes are also simulated from independent normal distributions, but without mean shift. The amount of joint differential expression is controlled by the conditional correlations, positive for one phenotype, negative for the other. The correlation coefficients are staggered at values of

with a correlation of zero corresponding to the null situation without joint differential expression and a value of being representative of the best pairs we see in true datasets. The right panel in Figure 7 displays the ROC curves for these simulations. We observe only slight differences between logistic regression and CorScor. Both methods show good power for detecting gene pairs with strong joint differential expression as they are found in true microarray datasets. In summary, we conclude that CorScor is as powerful at detecting relevant amounts of joint differential expression as logistic regression, but has a markedly lower computational cost.

Software

All our computations were implemented in the statistical programming language R [20]. Via its function cor, it provides a very convenient and efficient routine for estimating Pearson and Spearman gene-pair correlation coefficients from an expression matrix. In the colon and BRCA1 data, an exhaustive search across all gene pairs with CorScor takes about 5 seconds on a 1.5 GHz Intel-Pentium-powered personal computer with 512 Mb of RAM.

All our code for identifying gene pairs with joint differential expression, as well as for their visualization by scatterplots and heat maps, is available as a documented package named corscor, and will be submitted to the Bioconductor project [21]. Links and updates can also be found on our supplementary website [18].

Discussion

In a recent paper, Xiao and colleagues [22] considered multivariate searches for differentially expressed gene combinations. Their goal was to uncover subsets of predefined size k that are such that the multivariate distributions of expression in the two phenotypes differ. Similar ideas were used by the same group in the context of data exploration and variable selection [23, 24]. The goal of their approach is to uncover sets that potentially consist of combinations of joint and marginally differentially expressed genes. This is a different goal from that considered here. For example, in Figure 4, vertically shifting all the blue points would increase multivariate difference but leave the on/off scores from Equation (2) unchanged. Here, we emphasize the search for interactions per se, because of the clearer functional genomics implications, though high multivariate distance can also be of interest. The Xiao et al. approach is computationally demanding because each set is evaluated by an additional cross-validation. Comprehensive exploration of all pairs is challenging and stochastic search is necessary for subsets of three or more.

In the section 'Comparison with predictive modeling', we presented an approach to screening for joint differential expression based on predictive modeling. While this shares the scope of CorScor, it is not scalable to the current dimensions of gene-expression data. A full search with predictive modeling on the colon or the BRCA1 data with less than 3,000 genes each requires about two weeks of central processing unit time, whereas CorScor needs only about 5 seconds. Since the number of gene pairs and thus the computing time grows quadratically with the number of genes, the analysis of a roughly quintupled Affymetrix HGU133 array with more than 12,000 genes would increase the computing time by a factor of roughly 25, making the predictive-modeling approach prohibitive for practical application. We also observed that the gene pairs found by CorScor and by the predictive-modeling approach differ. To develop a better sense of the nature of the differences, we visually compared a large number of gene pairs from the two methods (not shown). The scatterplots of the top gene pairs according to the gap/substitution predictive-modeling scoring function in Equation (4) reveal that the predictive approach is very sensitive to outliers, whereas CorScor is more robust in this regard. Additionally, the joint separation is often more pronounced with CorScor. In the on/off search, visual scatterplot inspection and examination of gene annotations favor CorScor further. The predictive-modeling objective function in Equation (5) does not seem to exactly match the scope of its correlation-based counterpart and generally did not yield any gene pairs that could serve as indicators for aberrant molecular processes.

In the on/off search, in particular, a critical difference is in the fact that pairs can show strong evidence of a reversal in the sign of the conditional correlations, while still having a substantial overlap of the two conditional distributions (see for example the top left and top right pairs in Figure 4). This can lead to a high CorScor value, but leads to only a moderate predictive score, and a small multivariate distance. These cases, however, can be highly relevant biologically, and it is important to be able to identify them. In conclusion, of the two approaches that we are proposing and investigating here, CorScor is the simpler and more efficient computationally, and it also appears to identify gene pairs that are more promising candidates for a detailed biological analysis.

Another tool for finding interactions among gene pairs is relevance networks [25]. They examine interactions among genes by thresholding covariance matrices and graphically displaying the connections among the genes whose correlations exceed the threshold. We investigated a different type of gene interactions here, namely interactions that are altered as a result of the phenotype comparison of interest. However, the type of visualization implemented in relevance networks could also be used to represent the findings of our algorithm. Moreover, our approach was illustrated here using Pearson's and Spearman's correlations, but the general idea can be extended straightforwardly to any easily computed measure of pairwise association among gene expression levels. Finally, Zhou et al. [26] introduced second-order expression correlations that investigate regulatory networks by exploring variation of correlations across conditions. Whereas their method focuses on concordant correlations, our approach is based on correlation differences.

Conclusion

In summary, this paper presents a novel approach for finding gene pairs with joint differential expression. This represents a complement to the widely used one-gene-at-a-time testing approaches and the associated list-enrichment tests. The idea behind joint differential expression is to find genes that only in pairs, and not individually, discriminate two given phenotypes. These pairs make it possible to explore dependence and interaction among genes, as well as to screen for molecular processes that are linked to disease. Since the usual number of gene pairs is in the millions, there is a need for a quickly computable criterion. We propose two scoring functions, based on conditional and unconditional correlation coefficients. We show that these measures have the ability to uncover gene pairs that show promising scatterplot patterns and tend to share a biological relationship. In cancer research, a strength of CorScor lies in its potential ability to find genes that have not traditionally been involved with cancer, as they may represent new avenues for cancer cell biology and, more importantly, therapeutic intervention.

Additional data files

The following additional data are available with the online version of this paper. To provide further evidence for the general applicability of the CorScor approach, we provide empirical results for four additional microarray problems as additional data files. Additional data file 1 is from a publicly available leukemia study by Armstrong et al. [27, 28]. The data originated from Affymetrix HG U95A arrays and, after our normalization, feature the expression of 6,177 genes across a total of 72 samples. For the CorScor analysis, we restricted to the binary distinction of 24 samples from acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL) versus 28 samples from acute myeloid leukemias (AML).

Additional data file 2 is based on a dataset from a publicly available lung cancer study of Bhattacharjee et al. [29, 30]. It also originated from Affymetrix HG U95A arrays and contains 3,171 genes after our normalization. The CorScor analysis was run on 20 carcinoid samples and 17 normal lung tissues. Additional data file 3 is a dataset from the seminal leukemia study of Golub et al. [31, 32]. It originated from Affymetrix Hu6800 arrays. The version we used after our normalization contained the expression of 3,571 genes across a total of 72 samples, 25 of which were from patients who had acute myeloid leukemias and 47 of which were from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Additional data file 4 is our analysis of publicly available cDNA arrays from Gruvberger et al. [33, 34]. The data in Additional data file 4 monitor 3,389 genes across 30 estrogen-receptor-negative and 28 estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer samples.

The scatterplots in the additional data files clearly show the presence of joint differential expression for the gap/substitution situation in all four datasets. Again, our idea works here because the red and blue data points are tightly aligned along their respective principle component, yielding good conditional correlation. On the other hand, the two phenotypes are separated, resulting in a low overall correlation. Also, the scatterplots for the on/off-situation clearly show the presence of joint differential expression, and they confirm that that there are gene pairs with reverse correlation in the case and control samples.

In the tables in the additional data files, we report the results from the permutation test on each of the four datasets. They are qualitatively similar to the ones from the colon and BRCA1 data shown in Table 3, meaning that, again, the real gene pairs score sufficiently better than the random ones.

References

  1. Tusher VG, Tibshirani R, Chu G: Significance analysis of microarrays applied to the ionizing radiation response. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001, 98: 5116-5121. 10.1073/pnas.091062498.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  2. Efron B, Tibshirani R, Storey J, Tusher V: Empirical Bayes analysis of a microarray experiment. J Am Stat Assoc. 2001, 96: 1151-1160. 10.1198/016214501753382129.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  3. Pan W: A comparative review of statistical methods for discovering differentially expressed genes in replicated microarray experiments. Bioinformatics. 2002, 18: 546-554. 10.1093/bioinformatics/18.4.546.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  4. Dudoit S, Fridlyand J: Classification in microarray experiments. Statistical Analysis of Gene Expression Data. Edited by: Speed T. 2003, New York: Chapman and Hall, 93-158.

    Google Scholar 

  5. Dettling M, Bühlmann P: Finding predictive gene groups from microarray data. J Multivariate Anal. 2004, 90: 106-131. 10.1016/j.jmva.2004.02.012.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  6. Dettling M: Bagboosting for tumor classification with gene expression data. Bioinformatics. 2004, 20: 3583-3593.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  7. Li T, Zhang C, Ogihara M: A comparative study of feature selection and multiclass classification methods for tissue classification based on gene expression. Bioinformatics. 2004, 20: 2429-2437. 10.1093/bioinformatics/bth267.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  8. Soukup M, Cho H, Lee J: Robust classification modeling on microarray data using misclassification penalized posterior. Bioinformatics. 2005, 21 (suppl 1): i423-i430. 10.1093/bioinformatics/bti1020.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  9. Hotelling H: Multivariate quality control. Techniques of Statistical Analysis. Edited by: Eisenhart C, Hastay MW, Wallis WA. 1947, New York: McGraw-Hill, 111-184.

    Google Scholar 

  10. Alon U, Barkai N, Notterdam D, Gish K, Ybarra S, Mack D, Levine A: Broad patterns of gene expression revealed by clustering analysis of tumor and normal colon tissues probed by oligonucleotide arrays. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1999, 96: 6745-6750. 10.1073/pnas.96.12.6745.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  11. Princeton Colorectal Cancer Research Page. [http://microarray.princeton.edu/oncology]

  12. Hedenfalk I, Duggan D, Chen Y, Radmacher M, Bittner M, Simon R, Meltzer P, Gusterson B, Esteller M, Raffeld M, et al: Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer. New Engl J Med. 2001, 344: 539-548. 10.1056/NEJM200102223440801.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  13. Hedenfalk BRCA1 Data Supplementary Page. [http://research.nhgri.nih.gov/microarray/NEJM_Supplement]

  14. Yang Y, Dudoit S, Luu P, Lin D, Peng V, Ngai J, Speed T: Normalization for cDNA microarray data: a robust composite method addressing single and multiple slide systematic variation. Nucleic Acids Res. 2002, 30: e15-10.1093/nar/30.4.e15.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  15. Kanehisa M, Goto S: KEGG: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes. Nucleic Acids Res. 2000, 28: 27-30. 10.1093/nar/28.1.27.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  16. Ashburner M, Ball CA, Blake JA, Botstein D, Butler H, Cherry JM, Davis AP, Dolinski K, Dwight SS, Eppig JT, et al: Gene ontology: tool for the unification of biology: the Gene Ontology Consortium. Nat Genet. 2000, 25: 25-29. 10.1038/75556.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  17. Paull T, Cortez D, Bowers B, Elledge S, Gellert M: From the cover: direct DNA binding by BRCA1. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001, 98: 6086-6091. 10.1073/pnas.111125998.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  18. Marcel Dettling's Joint Differential Expression Supplementary Page. [http://stat.ethz.ch/~dettling/jde.html]

  19. Identifying Joint Differential Expression in Microarray Data. [http://stat.ethz.ch/talks/Ascona_04/Slides/wirapati.pdf]

  20. R Development Core Team: R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. 2004, Vienna, Austria

    Google Scholar 

  21. Gentleman R, Carey V, Bates D, Bolstad B, Dettling M, Dudoit S, Ellis B, Gautier L, Ge Y, Gentry J, et al: Bioconductor: open software development for computational biology and bioinformatics. Genome Biol. 2004, 5: R80-10.1186/gb-2004-5-10-r80.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  22. Xiao Y, Frisina R, Gordon A, Klebanov L, Yakovlev A: Multivariate search for differentially expressed gene combinations. BMC Bioinformatics. 2004, 5: 164-10.1186/1471-2105-5-164.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  23. Szabo A, Boucher K, Carroll W, Klebanov L, Tsodikov A, Yakovlev A: Variable selection and pattern recognition with gene expression data generated by the microarray technology. Math Biosci. 2002, 176: 71-98. 10.1016/S0025-5564(01)00103-1.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  24. Szabo A, Boucher K, Jones D, Klebanov L, Tsodikov A, Yakovlev A: Multivariate exploratory tools for microarray data analysis. Biostatistics. 2003, 4: 555-567. 10.1093/biostatistics/4.4.555.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  25. Butte AJ, Tamayo P, Slonim D, Golub TR, Kohane IS: Discovering functional relationships between RNA expression and chemotherapeutic susceptibility using relevance networks. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2000, 97: 12182-12186. 10.1073/pnas.220392197.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  26. Zhou X, Kao M, Huang H, Wong A, Nunez-Iglesias J, Primig M, Aparicio O, Finch C, Morgan T, Wong W: Functional annotation and network reconstruction through cross-platform integration of microarray data. Nat Biotechnol. 2005, 23: 238-243. 10.1038/nbt1058.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  27. Armstrong S, Staunton J, Silverman L, Pieters R, den Boer M, Minden M, Sallan S, Lander E, Golub T, Korsmeyer S: MLL translocations specify a distinct gene expression profile that distinguishes a unique leukemia. Nat Genet. 2002, 30: 41-47. 10.1038/ng765.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  28. Broad Institute Cancer Program Publication. [http://www.broad.mit.edu/cgi-bin/cancer/publications/pub_paper.cgi?mode=view&paper_id=63]

  29. Bhattacharjee A, Richards W, Staunton J, Li C, Monti S, Vasa P, Ladd C, Behesti J, Bueno R, Gillette M, et al: Classification of human lung carcinomas by mRNA expression profiling reveals distinct adenocarcinoma subclasses. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001, 98: 13790-13795. 10.1073/pnas.191502998.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  30. Meyerson Laboratory: Lung Cancer Genomics. [http://research.dfci.harvard.edu/meyersonlab/lungca/]

  31. Golub T, Slonim D, Tamayo P, Huard C, Gassenbeek M, Mesirov J, Coller H, Loh M, Downing J, Caliguri M, et al: Molecular classification of cancer: class discovery and class prediction by gene expression monitoring. Science. 1999, 286: 531-538. 10.1126/science.286.5439.531.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  32. Broad Institute: Cancer Program Datasets. [http://www.broad.mit.edu/cgi-bin/cancer/datasets.cgi]

  33. Gruvberger S, Ringner M, Chen Y, Panavally S, Saal L, Borg A, Fernö M, Peterson C, Meltzer P: Estrogen receptor status in breast cancer is associated with remarkably distinct gene expression patterns. Cancer Res. 2001, 61: 5979-5984.

    PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  34. NIH Website Supporting the Gruvberger et al. Publication. [http://research.nhgri.nih.gov/microarray/ER_data.txt]

Download references

Acknowledgements

Work supported by NSF grant NSF034211, by the Johns Hopkins SPORE in breast cancer P50CA88843 and GI cancer P50CA62924, and by core grant P30CA06973. We thank Ben Ho Park for his useful comments.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Marcel Dettling.

Electronic supplementary material

13059_2005_1123_MOESM1_ESM.pdf

Additional File 1: Data from a publicly available leukemia study by Armstrong et al. [27, 28]. The data originated from Affymetrix HG U95A arrays and, after our normalization, feature the expression of 6,177 genes across a total of 72 samples. For the CorScor analysis, we restricted to the binary distinction of 24 samples from acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL) versus 28 samples from acute myeloid leukemias (AML) (PDF 133 KB)

13059_2005_1123_MOESM2_ESM.pdf

Additional File 2: A dataset from a publicly available lung cancer study of Bhattacharjee et al. [29, 30]. It also originated from Affymetrix HG U95A arrays and contains 3,171 genes after our normalization. The CorScor analysis was run on 20 carcinoid samples and 17 normal lung tissues (PDF 106 KB)

13059_2005_1123_MOESM3_ESM.pdf

Additional File 3: A dataset from the seminal leukemia study of Golub et al. [31, 32]. It originated from Affymetrix Hu6800 arrays. The version we used after our normalization contained the expression of 3,571 genes across a total of 72 samples, 25 of which were from patients who had acute myeloid leukemias and 47 of which were from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (PDF 219 KB)

13059_2005_1123_MOESM4_ESM.pdf

Additional File 4: Our analysis of publicly available cDNA arrays from Gruvberger et al. [33, 34]. The data monitor 3,389 genes across 30 estrogen-receptor-negative and 28 estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer samples (PDF 155 KB)

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Dettling, M., Gabrielson, E. & Parmigiani, G. Searching for differentially expressed gene combinations. Genome Biol 6, R88 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2005-6-10-r88

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Revised:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2005-6-10-r88

Keywords