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Browsing by Author "Cooper, David N."
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Item Discriminating between disease-causing and neutral non-frameshifting micro-INDELs by support vector machines by means of integrated sequence- and structure-based features(Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2013-04-05) Zhao, Huiying; Yang, Yuedong; Lin, Hai; Zhang, Xinjun; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Liu, Yunlong; Zhou, YaoqiMicro-INDELs (insertions or deletions of ≤20 bp) constitute the second most frequent class of human gene mutation after single nucleotide variants. A significant portion of exonic INDELs are non-frameshifting (NFS), serving to insert or delete a discrete number of amino-acid residues. Despite the relative abundance of NFS-INDELs, their damaging effect on protein structure and function has gone largely unstudied whilst bioinformatics tools for discriminating between disease-causing and neutral NFS-INDELs remain to be developed. We have developed such a technique (DDIG-in; Detecting DIsease-causing Genetic variations due to INDELs) by comparing the properties of disease-causing NFS-INDELs from the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) with putatively neutral NFS-INDELs from the 1,000 Genomes Project. Having considered 58 different sequence- and structure-based features, we found that predicted disordered regions around the NFS-INDEL region had the highest discriminative capability (disease versus neutral) with an Area Under the receiver-operating characteristic Curve (AUC) of 0.82 and a Matthews Correlation Coefficient (MCC) of 0.56. All features studied were combined by support vector machines (SVM) and selected by a greedy algorithm. The resulting SVM models were trained and tested by ten-fold cross-validation on the microdeletion dataset and independently tested on the microinsertion dataset and vice versa. The final SVM model for determining NFS-INDEL disease-causing probability was built on non-redundant datasets with a protein sequence identity cutoff of 35% and yielded an MCC value of 0.68, an accuracy of 84% and an AUC of 0.89. Predicted disease-causing probabilities exhibited a strong negative correlation with the average minor allele frequency (correlation coefficient, -0.84). DDIG-in, available at http://sparks.informatics.iupui.edu, can be used to estimate the disease-causing probability for a given NFS-INDEL.Item ExonImpact: Prioritizing Pathogenic Alternative Splicing Events(Wiley, 2017-01) Li, Meng; Feng, Weixing; Zhang, Xinjun; Yang, Yuedong; Wang, Kejun; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Wang, Yue; Zhou, Yaoqi; Liu, Yunlong; Medicine, School of MedicineAlternative splicing (AS) is a closely regulated process that allows a single gene to encode multiple protein isoforms, thereby contributing to the diversity of the proteome. Dysregulation of the splicing process has been found to be associated with many inherited diseases. However, in amongst the pathogenic AS events there are numerous “passenger” events whose inclusion or exclusion does not lead to significant changes with respect to protein function. In this study, we evaluate the secondary and tertiary structural features of proteins associated with disease-causing and neutral AS events, and show that several structural features are strongly associated with the pathological impact of exon inclusion. We further develop a machine learning-based computational model, ExonImpact, for prioritizing and evaluating the functional consequences of hitherto uncharacterized AS events. We evaluated our model using several strategies including cross-validation, and data from the Gene-Tissue Expression (GTEx) and ClinVar databases. ExonImpact is freely available at http://watson.compbio.iupui.edu/ExonImpactItem Impact of human pathogenic micro-insertions and micro-deletions on post-transcriptional regulation(Oxford University Press, 2014-06-01) Zhang, Xinjun; Lin, Hai; Zhao, Huiying; Hao, Yangyang; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Zhou, Yaoqi; Liu, Yunlong; Department of Medical & Molecular Genetics, IU School of MedicineSmall insertions/deletions (INDELs) of ≤21 bp comprise 18% of all recorded mutations causing human inherited disease and are evident in 24% of documented Mendelian diseases. INDELs affect gene function in multiple ways: for example, by introducing premature stop codons that either lead to the production of truncated proteins or affect transcriptional efficiency. However, the means by which they impact post-transcriptional regulation, including alternative splicing, have not been fully evaluated. In this study, we collate disease-causing INDELs from the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) and neutral INDELs from the 1000 Genomes Project. The potential of these two types of INDELs to affect binding-site affinity of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) was then evaluated. We identified several sequence features that can distinguish disease-causing INDELs from neutral INDELs. Moreover, we built a machine-learning predictor called PinPor (predicting pathogenic small insertions and deletions affecting post-transcriptional regulation, http://watson.compbio.iupui.edu/pinpor/) to ascertain which newly observed INDELs are likely to be pathogenic. Our results show that disease-causing INDELs are more likely to ablate RBP-binding sites and tend to affect more RBP-binding sites than neutral INDELs. Additionally, disease-causing INDELs give rise to greater deviations in binding affinity than neutral INDELs. We also demonstrated that disease-causing INDELs may be distinguished from neutral INDELs by several sequence features, such as their proximity to splice sites and their potential effects on RNA secondary structure. This predictor showed satisfactory performance in identifying numerous pathogenic INDELs, with a Matthews correlation coefficient (MCC) value of 0.51 and an accuracy of 0.75.Item Investigating DNA-, RNA-, and protein-based features as a means to discriminate pathogenic synonymous variants(Wiley, 2017) Livingstone, Mark; Folkman, Lukas; Yang, Yuedong; Zhang, Ping; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Liu, Yunlong; Stantic, Bela; Zhou, Yaoqi; Department of Medical & Molecular Genetics, IU School of MedicineSynonymous single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), although they do not alter the encoded protein sequences, have been implicated in many genetic diseases. Experimental studies indicate that synonymous SNVs can lead to changes in the secondary and tertiary structures of DNA and RNA, thereby affecting translational efficiency, cotranslational protein folding as well as the binding of DNA-/RNA-binding proteins. However, the importance of these various features in disease phenotypes is not clearly understood. Here, we have built a support vector machine (SVM) model (termed DDIG-SN) as a means to discriminate disease-causing synonymous variants. The model was trained and evaluated on nearly 900 disease-causing variants. The method achieves robust performance with the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.84 and 0.85 for protein-stratified 10-fold cross-validation and independent testing, respectively. We were able to show that the disease-causing effects in the immediate proximity to exon–intron junctions (1–3 bp) are driven by the loss of splicing motif strength, whereas the gain of splicing motif strength is the primary cause in regions further away from the splice site (4–69 bp). The method is available as a part of the DDIG server at http://sparks-lab.org/ddig.Item RegSNPs-intron: a computational framework for predicting pathogenic impact of intronic single nucleotide variants(BMC, 2019-11-28) Lin, Hai; Hargreaves, Katherine A.; Li, Rudong; Reiter, Jill L.; Wang, Yue; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Zhou, Yaoqi; Zhang, Chi; Eadon, Michael T.; Dolan, M. Eileen; Ipe, Joseph; Skaar, Todd C.; Liu, Yunlong; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineSingle nucleotide variants (SNVs) in intronic regions have yet to be systematically investigated for their disease-causing potential. Using known pathogenic and neutral intronic SNVs (iSNVs) as training data, we develop the RegSNPs-intron algorithm based on a random forest classifier that integrates RNA splicing, protein structure, and evolutionary conservation features. RegSNPs-intron showed excellent performance in evaluating the pathogenic impacts of iSNVs. Using a high-throughput functional reporter assay called ASSET-seq (ASsay for Splicing using ExonTrap and sequencing), we evaluate the impact of RegSNPs-intron predictions on splicing outcome. Together, RegSNPs-intron and ASSET-seq enable effective prioritization of iSNVs for disease pathogenesis.Item regSNPs-splicing: a tool for prioritizing synonymous single-nucleotide substitution(Springer, 2017) Zhang, Xinjun; Li, Meng; Lin, Hai; Rao, Xi; Feng, Weixing; Yang, Yuedong; Mort, Matthew; Cooper, David N.; Wang, Yue; Wang, Yadong; Wells, Clark; Zhou, Yaoqi; Liu, Yunlong; Department of Medical & Molecular Genetics, IU School of MedicineWhile synonymous single-nucleotide variants (sSNVs) have largely been unstudied, since they do not alter protein sequence, mounting evidence suggests that they may affect RNA conformation, splicing, and the stability of nascent-mRNAs to promote various diseases. Accurately prioritizing deleterious sSNVs from a pool of neutral ones can significantly improve our ability of selecting functional genetic variants identified from various genome-sequencing projects, and, therefore, advance our understanding of disease etiology. In this study, we develop a computational algorithm to prioritize sSNVs based on their impact on mRNA splicing and protein function. In addition to genomic features that potentially affect splicing regulation, our proposed algorithm also includes dozens structural features that characterize the functions of alternatively spliced exons on protein function. Our systematical evaluation on thousands of sSNVs suggests that several structural features, including intrinsic disorder protein scores, solvent accessible surface areas, protein secondary structures, and known and predicted protein family domains, show significant differences between disease-causing and neutral sSNVs. Our result suggests that the protein structure features offer an added dimension of information while distinguishing disease-causing and neutral synonymous variants. The inclusion of structural features increases the predictive accuracy for functional sSNV prioritization.