GenoGAM: Genome-wide generalized additive models for ChIP-Seq analysis

Stricker G, Engelhardt A, Schulz D, Schmid M, Tresch A, Gagneur J (2017)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2017

Journal

Book Volume: 33

Pages Range: 2258-2265

Journal Issue: 15

DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btx150

Abstract

Motivation: Chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing (ChIP-Seq) is a widely used approach to study protein-DNA interactions. Often, the quantities of interest are the differential occupancies relative to controls, between genetic backgrounds, treatments, or combinations thereof. Current methods for differential occupancy of ChIP-Seq data rely however on binning or sliding window techniques, for which the choice of the window and bin sizes are subjective. Results: Here, we present GenoGAM (Genome-wide Generalized Additive Model), which brings the well-established and flexible generalized additive models framework to genomic applications using a data parallelism strategy. We model ChIP-Seq read count frequencies as products of smooth functions along chromosomes. Smoothing parameters are objectively estimated from the data by crossvalidation, eliminating ad hoc binning and windowing needed by current approaches. GenoGAM provides base-level and region-level significance testing for full factorial designs. Application to a ChIP-Seq dataset in yeast showed increased sensitivity over existing differential occupancy methods while controlling for type I error rate. By analyzing a set of DNA methylation data and illustrating an extension to a peak caller, we further demonstrate the potential of GenoGAM as a generic statistical modeling tool for genome-wide assays.

Involved external institutions

How to cite

APA:

Stricker, G., Engelhardt, A., Schulz, D., Schmid, M., Tresch, A., & Gagneur, J. (2017). GenoGAM: Genome-wide generalized additive models for ChIP-Seq analysis. Bioinformatics, 33(15), 2258-2265. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx150

MLA:

Stricker, Georg, et al. "GenoGAM: Genome-wide generalized additive models for ChIP-Seq analysis." Bioinformatics 33.15 (2017): 2258-2265.

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