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Identifying temporal molecular signatures underlying cardiovascular diseases: A data science platform
Abstract
Objective
During cardiovascular disease progression, molecular systems of myocardium (e.g., a proteome) undergo diverse and distinct changes. Dynamic, temporally-regulated alterations of individual molecules underlie the collective response of the heart to pathological drivers and the ultimate development of pathogenesis. Advances in high-throughput omics technologies have enabled cost-effective, temporal profiling of targeted systems in animal models of human diseases. However, computational analysis of temporal patterns from omics data remains challenging. In particular, bioinformatic pipelines involving unsupervised statistical approaches to support cardiovascular investigations are lacking, which hinders one's ability to extract biomedical insights from these complex datasets.Approach and results
We developed a non-parametric data analysis platform to resolve computational challenges unique to temporal omics datasets. Our platform consists of three modules. Module I preprocesses the temporal data using either cubic splines or principal component analysis (PCA), and it simultaneously accomplishes the tasks on missing data imputation and denoising. Module II performs an unsupervised classification by K-means or hierarchical clustering. Module III evaluates and identifies biological entities (e.g., molecular events) that exhibit strong associations to specific temporal patterns. The jackstraw method for cluster membership has been applied to estimate p-values and posterior inclusion probabilities (PIPs), both of which guided feature selection. To demonstrate the utility of the analysis platform, we employed a temporal proteomics dataset that captured the proteome-wide dynamics of oxidative stress induced post-translational modifications (O-PTMs) in mouse hearts undergoing isoproterenol (ISO)-induced hypertrophy.Conclusion
We have created a platform, CV.Signature.TCP, to identify distinct temporal clusters in omics datasets. We presented a cardiovascular use case to demonstrate its utility in unveiling biological insights underlying O-PTM regulations in cardiac remodeling. This platform is implemented in an open source R package (https://github.com/UCLA-BD2K/CV.Signature.TCP).Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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