A study of computational methods to analyze gene expression data


Autoria(s): Ko, Youn Hee
Contribuinte(s)

Zhai, ChengXiang

Zhai, ChengXiang

Rodriguez-Zas, Sandra L.

Price, Nathan D.

Lu, Xinghua

Data(s)

21/01/2011

21/01/2011

22/01/2013

21/01/2011

01/12/2010

Resumo

The recent advent of new technologies has led to huge amounts of genomic data. With these data come new opportunities to understand biological cellular processes underlying hidden regulation mechanisms and to identify disease related biomarkers for informative diagnostics. However, extracting biological insights from the immense amounts of genomic data is a challenging task. Therefore, effective and efficient computational techniques are needed to analyze and interpret genomic data. In this thesis, novel computational methods are proposed to address such challenges: a Bayesian mixture model, an extended Bayesian mixture model, and an Eigen-brain approach. The Bayesian mixture framework involves integration of the Bayesian network and the Gaussian mixture model. Based on the proposed framework and its conjunction with K-means clustering and principal component analysis (PCA), biological insights are derived such as context specific/dependent relationships and nested structures within microarray where biological replicates are encapsulated. The Bayesian mixture framework is then extended to explore posterior distributions of network space by incorporating a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) model. The extended Bayesian mixture model summarizes the sampled network structures by extracting biologically meaningful features. Finally, an Eigen-brain approach is proposed to analyze in situ hybridization data for the identification of the cell-type specific genes, which can be useful for informative blood diagnostics. Computational results with region-based clustering reveals the critical evidence for the consistency with brain anatomical structure.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2142/18574

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Youn Hee Ko

Palavras-Chave #Gene network #Bayesian network #Bayesian mixture model #Principal component analysis (PCA) #Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) #in situ hybridization #brain #Eigen-brain #cell-type specificity