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MITIE: Simultaneous RNA-Seq-based transcript identification and quantification in multiple samples

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Behr,  J
Rätsch Group, Friedrich Miescher Laboratory, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Behr, J., Kahles, A., Zhong, Y., Sreedharan, V., Drewe, P., & Rätsch, G. (2013). MITIE: Simultaneous RNA-Seq-based transcript identification and quantification in multiple samples. Bioinformatics, 29(20), 2529-2538. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btt442.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-675C-C
Abstract
Motivation: High-throughput sequencing of mRNA (RNA-Seq) has led to tremendous improvements in the detection of expressed genes and reconstruction of RNA transcripts. However, the extensive dynamic range of gene expression, technical limitations and biases, as well as the observed complexity of the transcriptional landscape, pose profound computational challenges for transcriptome reconstruction.

Results: We present the novel framework MITIE (Mixed Integer Transcript IdEntification) for simultaneous transcript reconstruction and quantification. We define a likelihood function based on the negative binomial distribution, use a regularization approach to select a few transcripts collectively explaining the observed read data and show how to find the optimal solution using Mixed Integer Programming. MITIE can (i) take advantage of known transcripts, (ii) reconstruct and quantify transcripts simultaneously in multiple samples, and (iii) resolve the location of multi-mapping reads. It is designed for genome- and assembly-based transcriptome reconstruction. We present an extensive study based on realistic simulated RNA-Seq data. When compared with state-of-the-art approaches, MITIE proves to be significantly more sensitive and overall more accurate. Moreover, MITIE yields substantial performance gains when used with multiple samples. We applied our system to 38 Drosophila melanogaster modENCODE RNA-Seq libraries and estimated the sensitivity of reconstructing omitted transcript annotations and the specificity with respect to annotated transcripts. Our results corroborate that a well-motivated objective paired with appropriate optimization techniques lead to significant improvements over the state-of-the-art in transcriptome reconstruction.