Analysis and Correction of Crosstalk Effects in Pathway Analysis

Peter Westfall, Michele Donato, Zhonghui Xu, Alin Tomoiaga, James G Granneman, Robert G MacKenzie, Riyue Bao, Nandor Gabor Than, Roberto Romero, Sorin Draghici

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

98 Scopus citations

Abstract

Identifying the pathways that are significantly impacted in a given condition is a crucial step in understanding the underlying biological phenomena. All approaches currently available for this purpose calculate a P-value that aims to quantify the significance of the involvement of each pathway in the given phenotype. These P-values were previously thought to be independent. Here we show that this is not the case, and that many pathways can considerably affect each other's P-values through a "crosstalk" phenomenon. Although it is intuitive that various pathways could influence each other, the presence and extent of this phenomenon have not been rigorously studied and, most importantly, there is no currently available technique able to quantify the amount of such crosstalk. Here, we show that all three major categories of pathway analysis methods (enrichment analysis, functional class scoring, and topology-based methods) are severely influenced by crosstalk phenomena. Using real pathways and data, we show that in some cases pathways with significant P-values are not biologically meaningful, and that some biologically meaningful pathways with nonsignificant P-values become statistically significant when the crosstalk effects of other pathways are removed. We describe a technique able to detect, quantify, and correct crosstalk effects, as well as identify independent functional modules. We assessed this novel approach on data from four experiments involving three phenotypes and two species. This method is expected to allow a better understanding of individual experiment results, as well as a more refined definition of the existing signaling pathways for specific phenotypes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1885 - 1893
Number of pages9
JournalGenome Research
Volume23
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2013

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