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histoneHMM: Differential analysis of histone modifications with broad genomic footprints

  • Matthias Heinig
  • , Maria Colomé-Tatché
  • , Aaron Taudt
  • , Carola Rintisch
  • , Sebastian Schafer
  • , Michal Pravenec
  • , Norbert Hubner
  • , Martin Vingron
  • , Frank Johannes
  • Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics
  • University Medical Center Groningen
  • Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine
  • Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  • University of Groningen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: ChIP-seq has become a routine method for interrogating the genome-wide distribution of various histone modifications. An important experimental goal is to compare the ChIP-seq profiles between an experimental sample and a reference sample, and to identify regions that show differential enrichment. However, comparative analysis of samples remains challenging for histone modifications with broad domains, such as heterochromatin-associated H3K27me3, as most ChIP-seq algorithms are designed to detect well defined peak-like features. Results: To address this limitation we introduce histoneHMM, a powerful bivariate Hidden Markov Model for the differential analysis of histone modifications with broad genomic footprints. histoneHMM aggregates short-reads over larger regions and takes the resulting bivariate read counts as inputs for an unsupervised classification procedure, requiring no further tuning parameters. histoneHMM outputs probabilistic classifications of genomic regions as being either modified in both samples, unmodified in both samples or differentially modified between samples. We extensively tested histoneHMM in the context of two broad repressive marks, H3K27me3 and H3K9me3, and evaluated region calls with follow up qPCR as well as RNA-seq data. Our results show that histoneHMM outperforms competing methods in detecting functionally relevant differentially modified regions. Conclusion: histoneHMM is a fast algorithm written in C++ and compiled as an R package. It runs in the popular R computing environment and thus seamlessly integrates with the extensive bioinformatic tool sets available through Bioconductor. This makeshistoneHMM an attractive choice for the differential analysis of ChIP-seq data. Software is available from http://histonehmm.molgen.mpg.de.

Original languageEnglish
Article number60
JournalBMC Bioinformatics
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 12 Dec 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ChIP-seq
  • Computational biology
  • Differential analysis
  • Hidden Markov model
  • Histone modifications

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