Title
Circadian signatures in rat liver: from gene expression to pathways.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Circadian rhythms are 24 hour oscillations in many behavioural, physiological, cellular and molecular processes that are controlled by an endogenous clock which is entrained to environmental factors including light, food and stress. Transcriptional analyses of circadian patterns demonstrate that genes showing circadian rhythms are part of a wide variety of biological pathways. Pathway activity method can identify the significant pattern of the gene expression levels within a pathway. In this method, the overall gene expression levels are translated to a reduced form, pathway activity levels, via singular value decomposition (SVD). A given pathway represented by pathway activity levels can then be as analyzed using the same approaches used for analyzing gene expression levels. We propose to use pathway activity method across time to identify underlying circadian pattern of pathways. RESULTS: We used synthetic data to demonstrate that pathway activity analysis can evaluate the underlying circadian pattern within a pathway even when circadian patterns cannot be captured by the individual gene expression levels. In addition, we illustrated that pathway activity formulation should be coupled with a significance analysis to distinguish biologically significant information from random deviations. Next, we performed pathway activity level analysis on a rich time series of transcriptional profiling in rat liver. The over-represented five specific patterns of pathway activity levels, which cannot be explained by random event, exhibited circadian rhythms. The identification of the circadian signatures at the pathway level identified 78 pathways related to energy metabolism, amino acid metabolism, lipid metabolism and DNA replication and protein synthesis, which are biologically relevant in rat liver. Further, we observed tight coordination between cholesterol biosynthesis and bile acid biosynthesis as well as between folate biosynthesis, one carbon pool by folate and purine-pyrimidine metabolism. These coupled pathways are parts of a sequential reaction series where the product of one pathway is the substrate of another pathway. CONCLUSIONS: Rather than assessing the importance of a single gene beforehand and map these genes onto pathways, we instead examined the orchestrated change within a pathway. Pathway activity level analysis could reveal the underlying circadian dynamics in the microarray data with an unsupervised approach and biologically relevant results were obtained.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1186/1471-2105-11-540
BMC Bioinformatics
Keywords
Field
DocType
time series,singular value decomposition,bioinformatics,algorithms,circadian clocks,dna replication,gene expression,synthetic data,oscillations,lipid metabolism,circadian rhythm,protein synthesis,microarrays,signal transduction,microarray data
Circadian rhythm,Gene,Biology,Gene expression,Signal transduction,Bioinformatics,Genetics,DNA microarray,Circadian clock,Endogeny,Biological pathway
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
11
1
1471-2105
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
11
0.46
4
Authors
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Meric A. Ovacik1110.46
Siddharth Sukumaran2110.46
Richard R Almon3422.19
Debra C Dubois4422.19
William J Jusko5422.53
Ioannis P. Androulakis6879.42