articleBMC BioinformaticsMay 27, 2009GOLD OA

GAGE: generally applicable gene set enrichment for pathway analysis

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · University of Michigan · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

Gene set analysis (GSA) is a widely used strategy for gene expression data analysis based on pathway knowledge. GSA focuses on sets of related genes and has established major advantages over individual gene analyses, including greater robustness, sensitivity and biological relevance. However, previous GSA methods have limited usage as they cannot handle datasets of different sample sizes or experimental designs.

Results

To address these limitations, we present a new GSA method called Generally Applicable Gene-set Enrichment (GAGE). We successfully apply GAGE to multiple microarray datasets with different sample sizes, experimental designs and profiling techniques. GAGE shows significantly better results when compared to two other commonly used GSA methods of GSEA and PAGE. We demonstrate this improvement in the following three aspects: (1) consistency across repeated studies/experiments; (2) sensitivity and specificity; (3) biological relevance of the regulatory mechanisms inferred.GAGE reveals novel and relevant regulatory mechanisms from both published and previously unpublished microarray studies. From two published lung cancer data sets, GAGE derived a more cohesive and predictive mechanistic scheme underlying lung cancer progress and metastasis. For a previously unpublished BMP6 study, GAGE predicted novel regulatory mechanisms for BMP6 induced osteoblast differentiation, including the canonical BMP-TGF beta signaling, JAK-STAT signaling, Wnt signaling, and estrogen signaling pathways-all of which are supported by the experimental literature.

Citation impact

1,401
total citations
FWCI
4.93
Percentile
100%
References
50
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computational biology
  • DNA microarray
  • Biology
  • Gene expression profiling
  • Wnt signaling pathway
  • Computer science
  • Outlier
  • Robustness (evolution)
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Funding