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Journal ArticleDOI

A Next Generation Connectivity Map: L1000 Platform and the First 1,000,000 Profiles.

TL;DR: The expanded CMap is reported, made possible by a new, low-cost, high-throughput reduced representation expression profiling method that is shown to be highly reproducible, comparable to RNA sequencing, and suitable for computational inference of the expression levels of 81% of non-measured transcripts.
About: This article is published in Cell.The article was published on 2017-11-30 and is currently open access. It has received 1943 citations till now.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Alexandra B Keenan1, Sherry L. Jenkins1, Kathleen M. Jagodnik1, Simon Koplev1, Edward He1, Denis Torre1, Zichen Wang1, Anders B. Dohlman1, Moshe C. Silverstein1, Alexander Lachmann1, Maxim V. Kuleshov1, Avi Ma'ayan1, Vasileios Stathias2, Raymond Terryn2, Daniel J. Cooper2, Michele Forlin2, Amar Koleti2, Dusica Vidovic2, Caty Chung2, Stephan C. Schürer2, Jouzas Vasiliauskas3, Marcin Pilarczyk3, Behrouz Shamsaei3, Mehdi Fazel3, Yan Ren3, Wen Niu3, Nicholas A. Clark3, Shana White3, Naim Al Mahi3, Lixia Zhang3, Michal Kouril3, John F. Reichard3, Siva Sivaganesan3, Mario Medvedovic3, Jaroslaw Meller3, Rick J. Koch1, Marc R. Birtwistle1, Ravi Iyengar1, Eric A. Sobie1, Evren U. Azeloglu1, Julia A. Kaye4, Jeannette Osterloh4, Kelly Haston4, Jaslin Kalra4, Steve Finkbiener4, Jonathan Z. Li5, Pamela Milani5, Miriam Adam5, Renan Escalante-Chong5, Karen Sachs5, Alexander LeNail5, Divya Ramamoorthy5, Ernest Fraenkel5, Gavin Daigle6, Uzma Hussain6, Alyssa Coye6, Jeffrey D. Rothstein6, Dhruv Sareen7, Loren Ornelas7, Maria G. Banuelos7, Berhan Mandefro7, Ritchie Ho7, Clive N. Svendsen7, Ryan G. Lim8, Jennifer Stocksdale8, Malcolm Casale8, Terri G. Thompson8, Jie Wu8, Leslie M. Thompson8, Victoria Dardov7, Vidya Venkatraman7, Andrea Matlock7, Jennifer E. Van Eyk7, Jacob D. Jaffe9, Malvina Papanastasiou9, Aravind Subramanian9, Todd R. Golub, Sean D. Erickson10, Mohammad Fallahi-Sichani10, Marc Hafner10, Nathanael S. Gray10, Jia-Ren Lin10, Caitlin E. Mills10, Jeremy L. Muhlich10, Mario Niepel10, Caroline E. Shamu10, Elizabeth H. Williams10, David Wrobel10, Peter K. Sorger10, Laura M. Heiser11, Joe W. Gray11, James E. Korkola11, Gordon B. Mills12, Mark A. LaBarge13, Mark A. LaBarge14, Heidi S. Feiler11, Mark A. Dane11, Elmar Bucher11, Michel Nederlof11, Damir Sudar11, Sean M. Gross11, David Kilburn11, Rebecca Smith11, Kaylyn Devlin11, Ron Margolis, Leslie Derr, Albert Lee, Ajay Pillai 
TL;DR: The LINCS program focuses on cellular physiology shared among tissues and cell types relevant to an array of diseases, including cancer, heart disease, and neurodegenerative disorders.
Abstract: The Library of Integrated Network-Based Cellular Signatures (LINCS) is an NIH Common Fund program that catalogs how human cells globally respond to chemical, genetic, and disease perturbations. Resources generated by LINCS include experimental and computational methods, visualization tools, molecular and imaging data, and signatures. By assembling an integrated picture of the range of responses of human cells exposed to many perturbations, the LINCS program aims to better understand human disease and to advance the development of new therapies. Perturbations under study include drugs, genetic perturbations, tissue micro-environments, antibodies, and disease-causing mutations. Responses to perturbations are measured by transcript profiling, mass spectrometry, cell imaging, and biochemical methods, among other assays. The LINCS program focuses on cellular physiology shared among tissues and cell types relevant to an array of diseases, including cancer, heart disease, and neurodegenerative disorders. This Perspective describes LINCS technologies, datasets, tools, and approaches to data accessibility and reusability.

300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Bassel Abou-Khalil1, Pauls Auce1, Andreja Avbersek, Melanie Bahlo  +155 moreInstitutions (2)
TL;DR: The authors perform genome-wide association studies for 3 broad and 7 subtypes of epilepsy and identify 16 loci - 11 novel - that are further annotated by eQTL and partitioned heritability analyses that provide leads for epilepsy therapies based on underlying pathophysiology.
Abstract: The epilepsies affect around 65 million people worldwide and have a substantial missing heritability component. We report a genome-wide mega-analysis involving 15,212 individuals with epilepsy and 29,677 controls, which reveals 16 genome-wide significant loci, of which 11 are novel. Using various prioritization criteria, we pinpoint the 21 most likely epilepsy genes at these loci, with the majority in genetic generalized epilepsies. These genes have diverse biological functions, including coding for ion-channel subunits, transcription factors and a vitamin-B6 metabolism enzyme. Converging evidence shows that the common variants associated with epilepsy play a role in epigenetic regulation of gene expression in the brain. The results show an enrichment for monogenic epilepsy genes as well as known targets of antiepileptic drugs. Using SNP-based heritability analyses we disentangle both the unique and overlapping genetic basis to seven different epilepsy subtypes. Together, these findings provide leads for epilepsy therapies based on underlying pathophysiology.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Michael A. Gillette1, Michael A. Gillette2, Shankha Satpathy2, Song Cao3  +186 moreInstitutions (16)
09 Jul 2020-Cell
TL;DR: Comprehensive proteogenomic characterization of 110 tumors and 101 matched normal adjacent tissues (NATs) incorporating genomics, epigenomics, deep-scale proteomics, phosphoproteomics, and acetylproteomics identified therapeutic vulnerabilities associated with driver events involving KRAS, EGFR, and ALK.

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A generative model that bridges systems biology and molecular design, conditioning a generative adversarial network with transcriptomic data that can automatically design molecules that have a high probability to induce a desired transcriptomic profile.
Abstract: Finding new molecules with a desired biological activity is an extremely difficult task. In this context, artificial intelligence and generative models have been used for molecular de novo design and compound optimization. Herein, we report a generative model that bridges systems biology and molecular design, conditioning a generative adversarial network with transcriptomic data. By doing so, we can automatically design molecules that have a high probability to induce a desired transcriptomic profile. As long as the gene expression signature of the desired state is provided, this model is able to design active-like molecules for desired targets without any previous target annotation of the training compounds. Molecules designed by this model are more similar to active compounds than the ones identified by similarity of gene expression signatures. Overall, this method represents an alternative approach to bridge chemistry and biology in the long and difficult road of drug discovery.

246 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper performed a genome-wide association study in 35,735 cases and 222,076 controls from the UK Biobank and additional studies from the International COPD Genetics Consortium and identified 82 loci associated with P < 5'×'10'8; 47 of these were previously described in association with either COPD or population-based measures of lung function.
Abstract: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the leading cause of respiratory mortality worldwide. Genetic risk loci provide new insights into disease pathogenesis. We performed a genome-wide association study in 35,735 cases and 222,076 controls from the UK Biobank and additional studies from the International COPD Genetics Consortium. We identified 82 loci associated with P < 5 × 10-8; 47 of these were previously described in association with either COPD or population-based measures of lung function. Of the remaining 35 new loci, 13 were associated with lung function in 79,055 individuals from the SpiroMeta consortium. Using gene expression and regulation data, we identified functional enrichment of COPD risk loci in lung tissue, smooth muscle, and several lung cell types. We found 14 COPD loci shared with either asthma or pulmonary fibrosis. COPD genetic risk loci clustered into groups based on associations with quantitative imaging features and comorbidities. Our analyses provide further support for the genetic susceptibility and heterogeneity of COPD.

226 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) method as discussed by the authors focuses on gene sets, that is, groups of genes that share common biological function, chromosomal location, or regulation.
Abstract: Although genomewide RNA expression analysis has become a routine tool in biomedical research, extracting biological insight from such information remains a major challenge. Here, we describe a powerful analytical method called Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) for interpreting gene expression data. The method derives its power by focusing on gene sets, that is, groups of genes that share common biological function, chromosomal location, or regulation. We demonstrate how GSEA yields insights into several cancer-related data sets, including leukemia and lung cancer. Notably, where single-gene analysis finds little similarity between two independent studies of patient survival in lung cancer, GSEA reveals many biological pathways in common. The GSEA method is embodied in a freely available software package, together with an initial database of 1,325 biologically defined gene sets.

34,830 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: A new technique called t-SNE that visualizes high-dimensional data by giving each datapoint a location in a two or three-dimensional map, a variation of Stochastic Neighbor Embedding that is much easier to optimize, and produces significantly better visualizations by reducing the tendency to crowd points together in the center of the map.
Abstract: We present a new technique called “t-SNE” that visualizes high-dimensional data by giving each datapoint a location in a two or three-dimensional map. The technique is a variation of Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (Hinton and Roweis, 2002) that is much easier to optimize, and produces significantly better visualizations by reducing the tendency to crowd points together in the center of the map. t-SNE is better than existing techniques at creating a single map that reveals structure at many different scales. This is particularly important for high-dimensional data that lie on several different, but related, low-dimensional manifolds, such as images of objects from multiple classes seen from multiple viewpoints. For visualizing the structure of very large datasets, we show how t-SNE can use random walks on neighborhood graphs to allow the implicit structure of all of the data to influence the way in which a subset of the data is displayed. We illustrate the performance of t-SNE on a wide variety of datasets and compare it with many other non-parametric visualization techniques, including Sammon mapping, Isomap, and Locally Linear Embedding. The visualizations produced by t-SNE are significantly better than those produced by the other techniques on almost all of the datasets.

30,124 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) project was initiated in response to the growing demand for a public repository for high-throughput gene expression data and provides a flexible and open design that facilitates submission, storage and retrieval of heterogeneous data sets from high-power gene expression and genomic hybridization experiments.
Abstract: The Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) project was initiated in response to the growing demand for a public repository for high-throughput gene expression data. GEO provides a flexible and open design that facilitates submission, storage and retrieval of heterogeneous data sets from high-throughput gene expression and genomic hybridization experiments. GEO is not intended to replace in house gene expression databases that benefit from coherent data sets, and which are constructed to facilitate a particular analytic method, but rather complement these by acting as a tertiary, central data distribution hub. The three central data entities of GEO are platforms, samples and series, and were designed with gene expression and genomic hybridization experiments in mind. A platform is, essentially, a list of probes that define what set of molecules may be detected. A sample describes the set of molecules that are being probed and references a single platform used to generate its molecular abundance data. A series organizes samples into the meaningful data sets which make up an experiment. The GEO repository is publicly accessible through the World Wide Web at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo.

10,968 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: How BLAT was optimized is described, which is more accurate and 500 times faster than popular existing tools for mRNA/DNA alignments and 50 times faster for protein alignments at sensitivity settings typically used when comparing vertebrate sequences.
Abstract: Analyzing vertebrate genomes requires rapid mRNA/DNA and cross-species protein alignments A new tool, BLAT, is more accurate and 500 times faster than popular existing tools for mRNA/DNA alignments and 50 times faster for protein alignments at sensitivity settings typically used when comparing vertebrate sequences BLAT's speed stems from an index of all nonoverlapping K-mers in the genome This index fits inside the RAM of inexpensive computers, and need only be computed once for each genome assembly BLAT has several major stages It uses the index to find regions in the genome likely to be homologous to the query sequence It performs an alignment between homologous regions It stitches together these aligned regions (often exons) into larger alignments (typically genes) Finally, BLAT revisits small internal exons possibly missed at the first stage and adjusts large gap boundaries that have canonical splice sites where feasible This paper describes how BLAT was optimized Effects on speed and sensitivity are explored for various K-mer sizes, mismatch schemes, and number of required index matches BLAT is compared with other alignment programs on various test sets and then used in several genome-wide applications http://genomeucscedu hosts a web-based BLAT server for the human genome

8,326 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper proposed parametric and non-parametric empirical Bayes frameworks for adjusting data for batch effects that is robust to outliers in small sample sizes and performs comparable to existing methods for large samples.
Abstract: SUMMARY Non-biological experimental variation or “batch effects” are commonly observed across multiple batches of microarray experiments, often rendering the task of combining data from these batches difficult. The ability to combine microarray data sets is advantageous to researchers to increase statistical power to detect biological phenomena from studies where logistical considerations restrict sample size or in studies that require the sequential hybridization of arrays. In general, it is inappropriate to combine data sets without adjusting for batch effects. Methods have been proposed to filter batch effects from data, but these are often complicated and require large batch sizes (>25) to implement. Because the majority of microarray studies are conducted using much smaller sample sizes, existing methods are not sufficient. We propose parametric and non-parametric empirical Bayes frameworks for adjusting data for batch effects that is robust to outliers in small sample sizes and performs comparable to existing methods for large samples. We illustrate our methods using two example data sets and show that our methods are justifiable, easy to apply, and useful in practice. Software for our method is freely available at: http://biosun1.harvard.edu/complab/batch/.

6,319 citations

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