A comparative study of multi-omics integration tools for cancer driver gene identification and tumour subtyping

Author:

Sathyanarayanan Anita1,Gupta Rohit23,Thompson Erik W14,Nyholt Dale R1,Bauer Denis C5,Nagaraj Shivashankar H14

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health, and Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia

2. Department of Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India

3. Department of Computational Biology, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi, India

4. Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia

5. CSIRO, Health & Biosecurity, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Oncogenesis and cancer can arise as a consequence of a wide range of genomic aberrations including mutations, copy number alterations, expression changes and epigenetic modifications encompassing multiple omics layers. Integrating genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic and epigenomic datasets via multi-omics analysis provides the opportunity to derive a deeper and holistic understanding of the development and progression of cancer. There are two primary approaches to integrating multi-omics data: multi-staged (focused on identifying genes driving cancer) and meta-dimensional (focused on establishing clinically relevant tumour or sample classifications). A number of ready-to-use bioinformatics tools are available to perform both multi-staged and meta-dimensional integration of multi-omics data. In this study, we compared nine different integration tools using real and simulated cancer datasets. The performance of the multi-staged integration tools were assessed at the gene, function and pathway levels, while meta-dimensional integration tools were assessed based on the sample classification performance. Additionally, we discuss the influence of factors such as data representation, sample size, signal and noise on multi-omics data integration. Our results provide current and much needed guidance regarding selection and use of the most appropriate and best performing multi-omics integration tools.

Funder

Advance Queensland Research Fellowship

Queensland University of Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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