Abstract

Transcriptomes are known to organize themselves into gene co-expression clusters or modules where groups of genes display distinct patterns of coordinated or synchronous expression across independent biological samples. The functional significance of these co-expression clusters is suggested by the fact that highly coexpressed groups of genes tend to be enriched in genes involved in common functions and biological processes. While gene co-expression is widely assumed to reflect close regulatory proximity, the validity of this assumption remains unclear. Here we use a simple synthetic gene regulatory network (GRN) model and contrast the resulting co-expression structure produced by these networks with their known regulatory architecture and with the co-expression structure measured in available human expression data. Using randomization tests, we found that the levels of co-expression observed in simulated expression data were, just as with empirical data, significantly higher than expected by chance. When examining the source of correlated expression, we found that individual regulators, both in simulated and experimental data, fail, on average, to display correlated expression with their immediate targets. However, highly correlated gene pairs tend to share at least one common regulator, while most gene pairs sharing common regulators do not necessarily display correlated expression. Our results demonstrate that widespread co-expression naturally emerges in regulatory networks, and that it is a reliable and direct indicator of active co-regulation in a given cellular context.

Highlights

  • Organismal development arises from the interplay of thousands of gene products governed by an underlying network of regulatory interactions [1, 2]

  • As correlated pairs of genes are likely to occur by mere chance among millions of possible gene pairs, we confirmed that the frequency with which genes display highly correlated expression exceeds chance expectations

  • Using simulations based on a synthetic gene regulatory network (GRN) model we found that co-expression patterns naturally emerge under a wide range of regulatory architectures, and that these correlations exceed simple random expectations

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Organismal development arises from the interplay of thousands of gene products governed by an underlying network of regulatory interactions [1, 2]. While gene expression can respond to changes in numerous environmental variables, the dynamic expression of each gene is fully

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call