Abstract

Regulatory regions, like promoters and enhancers, cover an estimated 5-15% of the human genome. Changes to these sequences are thought to underlie much of human phenotypic variation and a substantial proportion of genetic causes of disease. However, our understanding of their functional encoding in DNA is still very limited. Applying machine or deep learning methods can shed light on this encoding and gapped k-mer support vector machines (gkm-SVMs) or convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are commonly trained on putative regulatory sequences. Here, we investigate the impact of negative sequence selection on model performance. By training gkm-SVM and CNN models on open chromatin data and corresponding negative training dataset, both learners and two approaches for negative training data are compared. Negative sets use either genomic background sequences or sequence shuffles of the positive sequences. Model performance was evaluated on three different tasks: predicting elements active in a cell-type, predicting cell-type specific elements, and predicting elements' relative activity as measured from independent experimental data. Our results indicate strong effects of the negative training data, with genomic backgrounds showing overall best results. Specifically, models trained on highly shuffled sequences perform worse on the complex tasks of tissue-specific activity and quantitative activity prediction, and seem to learn features of artificial sequences rather than regulatory activity. Further, we observe that insufficient matching of genomic background sequences results in model biases. While CNNs achieved and exceeded the performance of gkm-SVMs for larger training datasets, gkm-SVMs gave robust and best results for typical training dataset sizes without the need of hyperparameter optimization.

Highlights

  • Regulatory sequences play an important role in the control of transcription initiation

  • We found that convolutional neural networks (CNNs) models and Gapped k-mer support vector machine (gkm-SVM) models are suited for active DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHS) prediction

  • We could show that k-mer size is correlated to the number of known transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) motifs found in the negative training sequences and that shuffled sequences have a higher proportion of rare genomic 8-mers than DHS sequences and genomic background sequences

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Summary

Introduction

Regulatory sequences play an important role in the control of transcription initiation. Variants in regulatory elements can lead to changes in gene expression patterns and are associated with various diseases [1,2,3]. Deciphering the encryption of regulatory activity in genomic sequences is an important goal and an improved understanding will inevitably contribute to a better interpretation of personal genomes and phenotypes. The impact of different negative training data on regulatory sequence predictions

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