Abstract

BackgroundTranscription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to DNA and regulate gene expression. To understand details of gene regulation, characterizing TF binding sites in different cell types, diseases and among individuals is essential. However, sometimes TF binding can only be measured from biological samples that contain multiple cell or tissue types. Sample heterogeneity can have a considerable effect on TF binding site detection. While manual separation techniques can be used to isolate a cell type of interest from heterogeneous samples, such techniques are challenging and can change intra-cellular interactions, including protein-DNA binding. Computational deconvolution methods have emerged as an alternative strategy to study heterogeneous samples and numerous methods have been proposed to analyze gene expression. However, no computational method exists to deconvolve cell type specific TF binding from heterogeneous samples.ResultsWe present a probabilistic method, MixChIP, to identify cell type specific TF binding sites from heterogeneous chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) data. Our method simultaneously estimates the binding strength in different cell types as well as the proportions of different cell types in each sample when only partial prior information about cell type composition is available. We demonstrate the utility of MixChIP by analyzing ChIP-seq data from two cell lines which we artificially mix to generate (simulated) heterogeneous samples and by analyzing ChIP-seq data from breast cancer patients measuring oestrogen receptor (ER) binding in primary breast cancer tissues. We show that MixChIP is more accurate in detecting TF binding sites from multiple heterogeneous ChIP-seq samples than the standard methods which do not account for sample heterogeneity.ConclusionsOur results show that MixChIP can estimate cell-type proportions and identify cell type specific TF binding sites from heterogeneous ChIP-seq samples. Thus, MixChIP can be an invaluable tool in analyzing heterogeneous ChIP-seq samples, such as those originating from cancer studies. R implementation is available at http://research.ics.aalto.fi/csb/software/mixchip/.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-015-0834-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Transcription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to DNA and regulate gene expression

  • Detailed mapping of TF binding in different cell types, conditions, diseases and among individuals is central for understanding transcriptional regulation

  • Given that it is important to study heterogeneous samples and knowing the aforementioned challenges and limitations, we introduce a probabilistic method for identifying cell type specific binding sites from heterogeneous ChIP-seq samples

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Summary

Introduction

Transcription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to DNA and regulate gene expression. To understand details of gene regulation, characterizing TF binding sites in different cell types, diseases and among individuals is essential. Sometimes TF binding can only be measured from biological samples that contain multiple cell or tissue types. While manual separation techniques can be used to isolate a cell type of interest from heterogeneous samples, such techniques are challenging and can change intra-cellular interactions, including protein-DNA binding. Transcription factors are DNA-binding proteins that regulate expression of neighboring or distal genes. Detailed mapping of TF binding in different cell types, conditions, diseases and among individuals is central for understanding transcriptional regulation. DNA-protein interactions are measured from biological samples that contain multiple cell or tissue types.

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