학술논문

DeepCGP: A Deep Learning Method to Compress Genome-Wide Polymorphisms for Predicting Phenotype of Rice
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics IEEE/ACM Trans. Comput. Biol. and Bioinf. Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, IEEE/ACM Transactions on. 20(3):2078-2088 Jun, 2023
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Bioinformatics
Genomics
Data models
Predictive models
Mathematical models
Deep learning
Radio frequency
autoencoder
genomic selection
data compression
genomic prediction
Language
ISSN
1545-5963
1557-9964
2374-0043
Abstract
Genomic selection (GS) is expected to accelerate plant and animal breeding. During the last decade, genome-wide polymorphism data have increased, which has raised concerns about storage cost and computational time. Several individual studies have attempted to compress the genome data and predict phenotypes. However, compression models lack adequate quality of data after compression, and prediction models are time consuming and use original data to predict the phenotype. Therefore, a combined application of compression and genomic prediction modeling using deep learning could resolve these limitations. A Deep Learning C ompression-based G enomic P rediction (DeepCGP) model that can compress genome-wide polymorphism data and predict phenotypes of a target trait from compressed information was proposed. The DeepCGP model contained two parts: (i) an autoencoder model based on deep neural networks to compress genome-wide polymorphism data, and (ii) regression models based on random forests (RF), genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP), and Bayesian variable selection (BayesB) to predict phenotypes from compressed information. Two datasets with genome-wide marker genotypes and target trait phenotypes in rice were applied. The DeepCGP model obtained up to 99% prediction accuracy to the maximum for a trait after 98% compression. BayesB required extensive computational time among the three methods, and showed the highest accuracy; however, BayesB could only be used with compressed data. Overall, DeepCGP outperformed state-of-the-art methods in terms of both compression and prediction. Our code and data are available at https://github.com/tanzilamohita/DeepCGP.