Predicting the effects of copy-number variation in double and triple mutant combinations.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2012
JAX Source
Pac Symp Biocomput 2012:19-30.
PMID
22174259
First Page
19
Last Page
30
Abstract
The study of genetic interactions is a powerful tool in inferring structure and function of biological networks. To date, genetic interaction studies have been dominated by pair-wise gene deletion screens. However, classical genetic analysis and natural genetic variation involve diverse gene forms ranging from null alleles to copy number variants. Moreover, genetic variation is typically multifactorial. Addressing multiple combinatorial genetic variations ranging in gene activity is therefore of critical value. We approach this problem using genetic network modeling that quantitatively encodes how genes influence the activity of one another and phenotype outcomes. A network model was initially inferred from linear decomposition of gene expression data. We used this network to predict the effects of combining multi-copy and deletion mutations of specific gene pairs and a gene triplet. Predicted expression patterns across hundreds of genes were experimentally validated. Prediction success was critically dependent on how a multi-copy gene interacted with other genes in the network model. This strategy provides a template for the inference, prediction, and testing of genetically complex hypotheses involving diverse genetic variation.
Recommended Citation
Carter GW,
Hays M,
Li S,
Galitski T.
Predicting the effects of copy-number variation in double and triple mutant combinations. Pac Symp Biocomput 2012:19-30.