TENET: gene network reconstruction using transfer entropy reveals key regulatory factors from single cell transcriptomic data

Author:

Kim Junil12ORCID,T. Jakobsen Simon3,Natarajan Kedar N34,Won Kyoung-Jae12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biotech Research and Innovation Centre (BRIC), University of Copenhagen, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark

2. Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Stem Cell Biology, DanStem, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Ole Maaløes Vej 5, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark

3. Functional Genomics and Metabolism Unit, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

4. Danish Institute of Advanced Study (D-IAS), University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Accurate prediction of gene regulatory rules is important towards understanding of cellular processes. Existing computational algorithms devised for bulk transcriptomics typically require a large number of time points to infer gene regulatory networks (GRNs), are applicable for a small number of genes and fail to detect potential causal relationships effectively. Here, we propose a novel approach ‘TENET’ to reconstruct GRNs from single cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) datasets. Employing transfer entropy (TE) to measure the amount of causal relationships between genes, TENET predicts large-scale gene regulatory cascades/relationships from scRNAseq data. TENET showed better performance than other GRN reconstructors, in identifying key regulators from public datasets. Specifically from scRNAseq, TENET identified key transcriptional factors in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and during direct cardiomyocytes reprogramming, where other predictors failed. We further demonstrate that known target genes have significantly higher TE values, and TENET predicted higher TE genes were more influenced by the perturbation of their regulator. Using TENET, we identified and validated that Nme2 is a culture condition specific stem cell factor. These results indicate that TENET is uniquely capable of identifying key regulators from scRNAseq data.

Funder

Novo Nordisk Foundation

Lundbeck Foundation

Independent Research Fund Denmark

National Institutes of Health

Villum Young Investigator

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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