Bayesian analysis of gene essentiality based on sequencing of transposon insertion libraries. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • MOTIVATION: Next-generation sequencing affords an efficient analysis of transposon insertion libraries, which can be used to identify essential genes in bacteria. To analyse this high-resolution data, we present a formal Bayesian framework for estimating the posterior probability of essentiality for each gene, using the extreme-value distribution to characterize the statistical significance of the longest region lacking insertions within a gene. We describe a sampling procedure based on the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm to calculate posterior probabilities of essentiality while simultaneously integrating over unknown internal parameters. RESULTS: Using a sequence dataset from a transposon library for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we show that this Bayesian approach predicts essential genes that correspond well with genes shown to be essential in previous studies. Furthermore, we show that by using the extreme-value distribution to characterize genomic regions lacking transposon insertions, this method is capable of identifying essential domains within genes. This approach can be used for analysing transposon libraries in other organisms and augmenting essentiality predictions with statistical confidence scores.

published proceedings

  • Bioinformatics

altmetric score

  • 5.75

author list (cited authors)

  • DeJesus, M. A., Zhang, Y. J., Sassetti, C. M., Rubin, E. J., Sacchettini, J. C., & Ioerger, T. R.

citation count

  • 59

complete list of authors

  • DeJesus, Michael A||Zhang, Yanjia J||Sassetti, Christopher M||Rubin, Eric J||Sacchettini, James C||Ioerger, Thomas R

publication date

  • March 2013