| Literature DB >> 23324119 |
Dragana Stanley1, Nathan S Watson-Haigh, Christopher J E Cowled, Robert J Moore.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The annotation of many genomes is limited, with a large proportion of identified genes lacking functional assignments. The construction of gene co-expression networks is a powerful approach that presents a way of integrating information from diverse gene expression datasets into a unified analysis which allows inferences to be drawn about the role of previously uncharacterised genes. Using this approach, we generated a condition-free gene co-expression network for the chicken using data from 1,043 publically available Affymetrix GeneChip Chicken Genome Arrays. This data was generated from a diverse range of experiments, including different tissues and experimental conditions. Our aim was to identify gene co-expression modules and generate a tool to facilitate exploration of the functional chicken genome.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23324119 PMCID: PMC3575264 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-14-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Cytoscape view of chicken co-expression network. The nodes are coloured by their module association.
Modules identified using WGCNA and a most enriched GO category in each module
| 1. Green | 473 | 93.23 | intracellular transport | 3.90 | 2.75E-07 |
| 2. Brown | 387 | 82.95 | cell cycle | 10.08 | 1.56E-25 |
| 3. Yellow | 256 | 62.89 | extracellular matrix part | 18.83 | 3.96E-17 |
| 4. Red | 227 | 83.26 | cytoskeleton | 3.88 | 1.75E-04 |
| 5. Turquoise | 103 | 38.83 | organ growth | 92.03 | 4.01E-04 |
| 6. Greenyellow | 99 | 77.78 | response to stress | 7.58 | 8.30E-04 |
| 7. Blue | 81 | 32.10 | low annotation | | |
| 8. Magenta | 67 | 28.36 | low annotation | | |
| 9. Purple | 58 | 86.21 | actin cytoskeleton | 13.87 | 1.74E-02 |
| 10. Tan | 58 | 87.93 | antigen processing | 69.02 | 1.46E-13 |
| 11. Pink | 57 | 80.70 | immune response | 19.75 | 4.01E-07 |
| 12. Salmon | 39 | 94.87 | alpha-catenin binding | 314.76 | 5.89E-03 |
| 13. Black | 33 | 69.70 | no GO enrichment | | |
| 14. Lightcyan | 25 | 84.00 | lipid biosynthetic process | 38.52 | 1.97E-10 |
| 15. Cyan | 24 | 91.67 | muscle protein | 76.39 | 1.69E-20 |
Additional file 1: Table S1 contains full tables with all of the GO categories and clusters of GO categories enriched.
Summary of the Clover analysis of statistically overrepresented (p<0.01) transcription factor binding sites based on Jaspar Core database
| 1 | NHP6B, hb, Pax4, br_Z1, br_Z4, SP1, SFL1, NHP6A, id1, NFATC2 |
| 2 | hb, Pax4, br_Z1, br_Z4, SFL1, NHP6A, id1, NFATC2, Dof2, HCM1 |
| 3 | hb, Pax4, NFATC2, id1, br_Z4, Myf, Dof2, SFL1, SOK2, CUP2 |
| 4 | hb, AZF1, br_Z1, br_Z4, id1, SFL1, NFATC2, HCM1, CUP2, SMP1 |
| 5 | HMG-I/Y, Pax4, hb, br_Z1, Foxd3, SFL1, br_Z4, id1, NHP6A, NFATC2 |
| 6 | CUP2, slp1, pan, PEND, Gfi, GABPA, NFYA, mirr, ARID3A, EDS1 |
| 7 | AZF1, Pax4, br_Z1, id1, CUP2, D, Dof2, PHD1, MNB1A, Ubx |
| 8 | br_Z3, NFYA, HAP3, HAP5, Gfi, CG34031, TBP, pan, ARR1, CG11617 |
| 9 | SFL1, id1, NFATC2, CUP2, Myf, SMP1, abi4, Dof2, br_Z3, SPIB |
| 10 | IRF1, IRF2, Myf, CUP2, NFATC2, Dof2, SOK2, Sox2, NHLH1, MNB1A |
| 11 | SPI1, Myf, MZF1_1-4, SOK2, EBF1, PHD1, RUNX1, achi, vis, ELF5 |
| 12 | SFL1, id1, Dof2, RME1, ELF5, PEND, MGA1, MNB1A, Gata1, SOX10 |
| 13 | PHD1, GSM1, MGA1, Ar, Lim1, abd-A, al, INO4, CG11294, CG32105 |
| 14 | NFYA, HAP5, Myf, NFATC2, PEND, HAP4, TBP, slp1, Dof2, cad |
| 15 | Myf, PHD1, AGL3, MNB1A, kni, YAP5, ECM23, GAT4, RLM1, MAC1 |
| HUBS | hb, NHP6B, br_Z1, Pax4, br_Z4, NHP6A, SFL1, id1, NFATC2, HCM1 |
The table shows top 10 overrepresented motifs, complete table is provided in Additional file 1: Table S1. The motif names and capitalisation are as they appear in Jaspar database.
Figure 2Novel motifs predicted using MEME software. Motif A was predicted using upstream sequences from module 11, B and C from module 14 and D from the module 15.