| Literature DB >> 26424858 |
Bernat Gel1, Anna Díez-Villanueva1, Eduard Serra1, Marcus Buschbeck2, Miguel A Peinado1, Roberto Malinverni3.
Abstract
MOTIVATION: Statistically assessing the relation between a set of genomic regions and other genomic features is a common challenging task in genomic and epigenomic analyses. Randomization based approaches implicitly take into account the complexity of the genome without the need of assuming an underlying statistical model.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26424858 PMCID: PMC4708104 DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btv562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioinformatics ISSN: 1367-4803 Impact factor: 6.937
Fig. 1.(A) Plot of the results of a permutation test assessing the association between a subset of 1000 HepG2 CTCF narrow peaks (ENCODE/Broad Institute) and CpG islands (Wu ), using a per chromosome randomization of CTCF peaks, the number of overlaps as the evaluation function and 5000 permutations. The association is highly significant with the observed value far from the limit of significance of the random distribution. (B) Plot of the local z-score of the permutation test in A. The association is strongly related to the exact position of the CTCF peaks since the z-score drops sharply as soon as the regions are shifted a few hundreds of bases