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Modelling genomes

Modelling genomes. Gil McVean Department of Statistics, Oxford. Why would we want to model a genome?. To identify genes Protein-coding RNA Small RNAs To identify regulatory elements Transcription factor binding sites Enhancers To classify genome content Repeat DNA Unique sequence

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Modelling genomes

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  1. Modelling genomes Gil McVean Department of Statistics, Oxford

  2. Why would we want to model a genome? • To identify genes • Protein-coding • RNA • Small RNAs • To identify regulatory elements • Transcription factor binding sites • Enhancers • To classify genome content • Repeat DNA • Unique sequence • To understand the processes that shape genomes • Mutation • Recombination • Duplication • Rearrangement • Natural selection

  3. s t Non-coding DNA Start codon Codon TERM Non-coding DNA T: 30% C: 20% A: 30% G: 20% T: 30% C: 20% A: 30% G: 20% ATG: 100% TAA: 30% TAG: 40% TGA: 30% AAA: 1/61% AAC: 1/61% AAG: 1/61% … TTT: 1/61% A rather simple model for a protein-coding gene STATES EMISSIONS

  4. Define model Explore properties Estimate parameters from data Test goodness-of-fit Refine model A ‘genome’ model is like any other statistical model

  5. Hidden Markov Models in bioinformatics • The model of a gene just described can be thought of as a hidden Markov model (HMM) • The underlying states evolve in a Markov fashion, but we observe features (the DNA sequence) emitted by those states • You will remember that there are lots of nice computational properties of hidden Markov models that we can use for inference • Finding a most likely sequence of states • Calculating posterior probabilities of a given state at a given position • There are also various algorithms we can use to estimate parameters of HMMs (e.g. ML estimation by EM) • How would you use the model of a gene to find new genes? • How well do you think it would do?

  6. Making useful HMMs in bioinformatics • To be useful, HMMs for genes have to incorporate many features • Regulatory sequences • Intron-splicing features • Correlations and biases in amino acid and base composition • A REALLY important feature to capture is their evolution • Important parts of genes and genomes evolve slower due to constraint

  7. Searching for homology • If we compare human and chimpanzee sequences they are approximately 98.8% identical at the DNA level. It is ‘easy’ to identify which parts of the genome in humans correspond to which parts in chimps • If we compare human with, say mouse, we can see some parts that are similar, and other parts where there is only vague or even no obvious similarity. • When measuring evolution, we need to identify regions that are homologous • Homology means similarity by descent • Traditionally, the problem of identifying homology has been intrinsically linked to the problem of alignment

  8. Alignment of PFEMP1 proteins from P. falciparum

  9. The simplest problem: aligning two sequences • Suppose we have just two protein sequences that we want to align • In evolution, three types of event can happen • Mutation to new amino acids • Insertion of new amino acids • Deletion of amino acids • We want to work out which amino acids in the two sequences are homologous – i.e. related to each other through shared ancestry WAKIS WEEKS W—AKIS WEEK-S What do the ‘-’s really mean?

  10. How can we construct an alignment algorithm? • What we want to do is to look at every possible alignment and choose the one that is ‘best’ • What we have to do is to find an efficient algorithm that can search every possible alignment and that has an objective measure as to what ‘best’ means • A natural approach is to make a model of alignments, parameterise it and find the alignment that maximises the likelihood • Although the problem sounds hard we can solve it using a hidden Markov model structure

  11. How does is work? • Suppose residues Xi and Yj are aligned to each other • Three things could happen next • The next two residues in each sequence could also align (A) • A gap could be introduced in sequence X (B) • A gap could be introduced in sequence Y (C) • We can parameterise the probabilities of each event Xi Yj XiXi+1 Xi- XiXi+1 (B) (C) (A) YjYj+1 YjYj+1 Yj-

  12. The full algorithm • We need to consider similar transitions for the cases when residue Xi is aligned to a gap after residue Yj, and when Yj is aligned to a gap after Xi • We need to specify various probabilities • The probability of inserting a gap • The probability of extending a gap • The probability of finishing the alignment • The probability of observing an aligned pair of residues (20x20) • The probability of observing a residue aligned to a gap (20) • Once specified we can use the Viterbi and Forward/Backward algorithms to identify ML alignments, sample from the posterior or calculate posterior probabilities Xi-a…Xi Xi …- Yj …- Yj-a…Yj

  13. The forward algorithm Xi+1 Emission probabilities = ek(Xi+1) H H D Transition probabilities = qij In alignment the state space is two-dimensional (residue i aligned to residue j)

  14. The Viterbi algorithm Xi-1 Xi Xi+1 H H H D D D A traceback matrix is used to keep track of the best partial alignments

  15. An example • Suppose the gap opening and extension parameters are 0.2 and 0.5 respectively. There is a 80% chance of observing a match, a 20/19% chance of observing any given mismatch and a 5% chance of observing each unaligned amino acid (We can ignore termination for the moment) • The BEST alignments are given below, each of which has log likelihood of -16.84, or 31% of the total likelihood (lnlk = -15.67). • In many real situations, the best alignment represents only a fraction of the total likelihood W—AKIS WEEK-S WA-KIS WEEK-S

  16. Posterior decoding • Using the forward-backward algorithm we can calculate the posterior probability that any residue is aligned to any other, or that a given residue is in a gap state X1 X2 X3 X4 X5 X1 X2 X3 X4 X5 Y1 Y1 Y2 Y2 Y3 Y3 Y4 Y4 Y5 Y5 Conditional on X2-Y3

  17. Extending the method • Originally, alignment algorithms (Needleman and Wunsch, 1970; Smith and Waterman, 1981; Gotoh 1982) were not explicitly defined as hidden Markov models • Finite-state automata (FSA) • There have been many extensions to the original idea • Local alignment • Repeat alignment • Protein family identification • Gene finding • Multiple alignment • The alignment algorithm is very much a workhorse of bioinformatics, as an alignment is needed or almost all subsequent analyses (e.g. phylogenetic tree reconstruction, population genetic inference) • However, relying on a single alignment is not always a great idea

  18. Doing away with alignment • For most problems, the alignment is not of primary interest • The natural thing to do is to integrate over alignments (as in the FB algorithm) to estimate parameters of interest • The key problem is that there is no computationally efficient algorithm for statisticalmultiple alignment. All widely-used methods use heuristic approaches

  19. Gene conversion and var gene diversity in P. falciparum • Multiple alignment methods typically assume the sequences are related to each through an evolutionary tree • For the case of multi-gene families, this may not be the case, because gene conversion between copies can lead to mosaic structures • If we wish to learn about the processes of conversion, a natural approach is to model the mosaicism • In the case of var genes, the sequences are so diverged that we also need to consider the problem of alignment

  20. Mosaic alignment • We could model the n+1th sequence as a mosaic of the previous n • We can calculate the likelihood of observing a given sequence by summing over all possible mosaic structures and their alignment • We can also identify the most likely mosaic structure and calculate the expected number of recombination events • Repeating the procedure for all sequences provides a way of assessing the importance of mosaicism within the family

  21. Extensive mosaicism within the var family

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