학술논문

Multivariate phenotype analysis enables genome-wide inference of mammalian gene function.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS Biology. 8/9/2022, Vol. 20 Issue 8, p1-41. 41p. 3 Diagrams, 10 Charts, 6 Graphs.
Subject
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*MEDICAL sciences
*FACTOR analysis
*HUMAN genes
*PHENOTYPES
*GENES
*GENOMES
Language
ISSN
1544-9173
Abstract
The function of the majority of genes in the human and mouse genomes is unknown. Investigating and illuminating this dark genome is a major challenge for the biomedical sciences. The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) is addressing this through the generation and broad-based phenotyping of a knockout (KO) mouse line for every protein-coding gene, producing a multidimensional data set that underlies a genome-wide annotation map from genes to phenotypes. Here, we develop a multivariate (MV) statistical approach and apply it to IMPC data comprising 148 phenotypes measured across 4,548 KO lines. There are 4,256 (1.4% of 302,997 observed data measurements) hits called by the univariate (UV) model analysing each phenotype separately, compared to 31,843 (10.5%) hits in the observed data results of the MV model, corresponding to an estimated 7.5-fold increase in power of the MV model relative to the UV model. One key property of the data set is its 55.0% rate of missingness, resulting from quality control filters and incomplete measurement of some KO lines. This raises the question of whether it is possible to infer perturbations at phenotype–gene pairs at which data are not available, i.e., to infer some in vivo effects using statistical analysis rather than experimentation. We demonstrate that, even at missing phenotypes, the MV model can detect perturbations with power comparable to the single-phenotype analysis, thereby filling in the complete gene–phenotype map with good sensitivity. A factor analysis of the MV model's fitted covariance structure identifies 20 clusters of phenotypes, with each cluster tending to be perturbed collectively. These factors cumulatively explain 75% of the KO-induced variation in the data and facilitate biological interpretation of perturbations. We also demonstrate that the MV approach strengthens the correspondence between IMPC phenotypes and existing gene annotation databases. Analysis of a subset of KO lines measured in replicate across multiple laboratories confirms that the MV model increases power with high replicability. The function of the majority of genes in the human and mouse genomes is unknown, and illuminating this "dark genome" is a major challenge for the biomedical sciences. This study shows that multi-dimensional phenotypes from single-gene knockout mouse lines can be analysed at a genome-wide scale both to increase power and infer missing phenotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]