Abstract
BackgroundTo determine which changes in the host cell genome are crucial for cervical carcinogenesis, a longitudinal in vitro model system of HPV-transformed keratinocytes was profiled in a genome-wide manner. Four cell lines affected with either HPV16 or HPV18 were assayed at 8 sequential time points for gene expression (mRNA) and gene copy number (DNA) using high-resolution microarrays. Available methods for temporal differential expression analysis are not designed for integrative genomic studies.ResultsHere, we present a method that allows for the identification of differential gene expression associated with DNA copy number changes over time. The temporal variation in gene expression is described by a generalized linear mixed model employing low-rank thin-plate splines. Model parameters are estimated with an empirical Bayes procedure, which exploits integrated nested Laplace approximation for fast computation. Iteratively, posteriors of hyperparameters and model parameters are estimated. The empirical Bayes procedure shrinks multiple dispersion-related parameters. Shrinkage leads to more stable estimates of the model parameters, better control of false positives and improvement of reproducibility. In addition, to make estimates of the DNA copy number more stable, model parameters are also estimated in a multivariate way using triplets of features, imposing a spatial prior for the copy number effect.ConclusionWith the proposed method for analysis of time-course multilevel molecular data, more profound insight may be gained through the identification of temporal differential expression induced by DNA copy number abnormalities. In particular, in the analysis of an integrative oncogenomics study with a time-course set-up our method finds genes previously reported to be involved in cervical carcinogenesis. Furthermore, the proposed method yields improvements in sensitivity, specificity and reproducibility compared to existing methods. Finally, the proposed method is able to handle count (RNAseq) data from time course experiments as is shown on a real data set.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2105-15-327) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
To determine which changes in the host cell genome are crucial for cervical carcinogenesis, a longitudinal in vitro model system of human papillomavirus (HPV)-transformed keratinocytes was profiled in a genome-wide manner
HPV-induced transformation The proposed method is demonstrated on data of an experiment on HPV-induced transformation
Hereto two cell lines are affected with HPV16 and two with HPV18 [26]
Summary
To determine which changes in the host cell genome are crucial for cervical carcinogenesis, a longitudinal in vitro model system of HPV-transformed keratinocytes was profiled in a genome-wide manner. A longitudinal in vitro system of four independent cell lines immortalized with either HPV16 or HPV18, previously shown to faithfully mimic cervical carcinogenesis at the (epi)genetic level [1,2,3], was used in this study. Abnormalities in DNA copy number were previously shown to directly affect expression of the genes located within these abnormalities and are believed to facilitate the identification of functionally relevant gene expression changes [4]. Integrating these two molecular levels will yield models of cancer development and progression, thereby reducing the complexity of (cervical) carcinogenesis [5]. We present a method that, in contrast to existing methods, is able to integrate DNA copy number and gene expression over time, while identifying temporal differential gene expression
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