Ontogenomic study of the relationship between number of gene splice variants and GO categorization

Motivation: Splice variation plays important roles in evolution and cancer. Different splice variants of a gene may be characteristic of particular cellular processes, subcellular locations or organs. Although several genomic projects have identified splice variants, there have been no large-scale c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioinformatics 2010-08, Vol.26 (16), p.1945-1949
Hauptverfasser: Kahn, Ari B., Zeeberg, Barry R., Ryan, Michael C., Jamison, D. Curtis, Rockoff, David M., Pommier, Yves, Weinstein, John N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Motivation: Splice variation plays important roles in evolution and cancer. Different splice variants of a gene may be characteristic of particular cellular processes, subcellular locations or organs. Although several genomic projects have identified splice variants, there have been no large-scale computational studies of the relationship between number of splice variants and biological function. The Gene Ontology (GO) and tools for leveraging GO, such as GoMiner, now make such a study feasible. Results: We partitioned genes into two groups: those with numbers of splice variants ≤b and >b (b=1,…, 10). Then we used GoMiner to determine whether any GO categories are enriched in genes with particular numbers of splice variants. Since there was no a priori ‘appropriate’ partition boundary, we studied those ‘robust’ categories whose enrichment did not depend on the selection of a particular partition boundary. Furthermore, because the distribution of splice variant number was a snapshot taken at a particular point in time, we confirmed that those observations were stable across successive builds of GenBank. A small number of categories were found for genes in the lower partitions. A larger number of categories were found for genes in the higher partitions. Those categories were largely associated with cell death and signal transduction. Apoptotic genes tended to have a large repertoire of splice variants, and genes with splice variants exhibited a distinctive ‘apoptotic island’ in clustered image maps (CIMs). Availability: Supplementary tables and figures are available at URL http://discover.nci.nih.gov/OG/supplementaryMaterials.html. The Safari browser appears to perform better than Firefox for these particular items. Contact: barry@discover.nci.nih.gov
ISSN:1367-4803
1460-2059
1367-4811
DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/btq335