Abstract

BackgroundChromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments are now the most comprehensive experimental approaches for mapping the binding of transcription factors (TFs) to their target genes. However, ChIP data alone is insufficient for identifying functional binding target genes of TFs for two reasons. First, there is an inherent high false positive/negative rate in ChIP-chip or ChIP-seq experiments. Second, binding signals in the ChIP data do not necessarily imply functionality.MethodsIt is known that ChIP-chip data and TF knockout (TFKO) data reveal complementary information on gene regulation. While ChIP-chip data can provide TF-gene binding pairs, TFKO data can provide TF-gene regulation pairs. Therefore, we propose a novel network approach for identifying functional TF-gene binding pairs by integrating the ChIP-chip data with the TFKO data. In our method, a TF-gene binding pair from the ChIP-chip data is regarded to be functional if it also has high confident curated TFKO TF-gene regulatory relation or deduced hypostatic TF-gene regulatory relation.Results and conclusionsWe first validated our method on a gathered ground truth set. Then we applied our method to the ChIP-chip data to identify functional TF-gene binding pairs. The biological significance of our identified functional TF-gene binding pairs was shown by assessing their functional enrichment, the prevalence of protein-protein interaction, and expression coherence. Our results outperformed the results of three existing methods across all measures. And our identified functional targets of TFs also showed statistical significance over the randomly assigned TF-gene pairs. We also showed that our method is dataset independent and can apply to ChIP-seq data and the E. coli genome. Finally, we provided an example showing the biological applicability of our notion.

Highlights

  • Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments are the most comprehensive experimental approaches for mapping the binding of transcription factors (TFs) to their target genes

  • A TF-gene binding pair, or a ChIP positive, is called functional if we can find evidence showing that the TF regulates the expression of the target gene

  • We showed that our method is dataset independent and can apply to ChIP-seq data and the E. coli genome

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Summary

Introduction

Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments are the most comprehensive experimental approaches for mapping the binding of transcription factors (TFs) to their target genes. There is an inherent high false positive/negative rate in ChIP-chip or ChIP-seq experiments. Binding signals in the ChIP data do not necessarily imply functionality. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments (ChIPchip or ChIP-seq) are the most comprehensive experimental approaches for mapping the binding of TFs to their target genes [2,3,5]. ChIP data alone are insufficient for identifying functional binding target genes of TFs for two reasons. There is an inherent high false positive/negative rate in ChIP-chip or ChIPseq experiments [6]. Binding signals in the ChIP-chip data do not necessarily imply functionality. The binding of TFs to the promoters of genes may not lead to subsequent transcription activation/ repression [9,10]

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