Abstract

BackgroundHuman Down syndrome (DS) is usually caused by genomic micro-duplications and dosage imbalances of human chromosome 21. It is associated with many genomic and phenotype abnormalities. Even though human DS occurs about 1 per 1,000 births worldwide, which is a very high rate, researchers haven’t found any effective method to cure DS. Currently, the most efficient ways of human DS prevention are screening and early detection.MethodsIn this study, we used deep learning techniques and analyzed a set of Illumina genotyping array data. We built a bi-stream convolutional neural networks model to screen/predict the occurrence of DS. Firstly, we built image input data by converting the intensities of each SNP site into chromosome SNP maps. Next, we proposed a bi-stream convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture with nine layers and two branch models. We further merged two CNN branch models into one model in the fourth convolutional layer, and output the prediction in the last layer.ResultsOur bi-stream CNN model achieved 99.3% average accuracies, and very low false-positive and false-negative rates, which was necessary for further applications in disease prediction and medical practice. We further visualized the feature maps and learned filters from intermediate convolutional layers, which showed the genomic patterns and correlated SNPs variations in human DS genomes. We also compared our methods with other CNN and traditional machine learning models. We further analyzed and discussed the characteristics and strengths of our bi-stream CNN model.ConclusionsOur bi-stream model used two branch CNN models to learn the local genome features and regional patterns among adjacent genes and SNP sites from two chromosomes simultaneously. It achieved the best performance in all evaluating metrics when compared with two single-stream CNN models and three traditional machine-learning algorithms. The visualized feature maps also provided opportunities to study the genomic markers and pathway components associated with Human DS, which provided insights for gene therapy and genomic medicine developments.

Highlights

  • Human Down syndrome (DS) is usually caused by genomic micro-duplications and dosage imbalances of human chromosome 21

  • Our results showed that the bi-stream convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture could construct very accurate and robust human DS screening/prediction models

  • The model built from Random Forest achieved the best performance in all evaluation metrics among all three traditional learning algorithms

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Summary

Introduction

Human Down syndrome (DS) is usually caused by genomic micro-duplications and dosage imbalances of human chromosome 21. Even though human DS occurs about 1 per 1,000 births worldwide, which is a very high rate, researchers haven’t found any effective method to cure DS. Current treatments of human DS mainly concentrate on physical therapy [8, 9], emotional and behavioral therapies [10, 11], educational therapy, and early intervention [10, 12]. These therapies only have some limited effects that cannot cure DS fundamentally

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