NBLDA: negative binomial linear discriminant analysis for RNA-Seq data

BMC Bioinformatics. 2016 Sep 13;17(1):369. doi: 10.1186/s12859-016-1208-1.

Abstract

Background: RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) has become a powerful technology to characterize gene expression profiles because it is more accurate and comprehensive than microarrays. Although statistical methods that have been developed for microarray data can be applied to RNA-Seq data, they are not ideal due to the discrete nature of RNA-Seq data. The Poisson distribution and negative binomial distribution are commonly used to model count data. Recently, Witten (Annals Appl Stat 5:2493-2518, 2011) proposed a Poisson linear discriminant analysis for RNA-Seq data. The Poisson assumption may not be as appropriate as the negative binomial distribution when biological replicates are available and in the presence of overdispersion (i.e., when the variance is larger than or equal to the mean). However, it is more complicated to model negative binomial variables because they involve a dispersion parameter that needs to be estimated.

Results: In this paper, we propose a negative binomial linear discriminant analysis for RNA-Seq data. By Bayes' rule, we construct the classifier by fitting a negative binomial model, and propose some plug-in rules to estimate the unknown parameters in the classifier. The relationship between the negative binomial classifier and the Poisson classifier is explored, with a numerical investigation of the impact of dispersion on the discriminant score. Simulation results show the superiority of our proposed method. We also analyze two real RNA-Seq data sets to demonstrate the advantages of our method in real-world applications.

Conclusions: We have developed a new classifier using the negative binomial model for RNA-seq data classification. Our simulation results show that our proposed classifier has a better performance than existing works. The proposed classifier can serve as an effective tool for classifying RNA-seq data. Based on the comparison results, we have provided some guidelines for scientists to decide which method should be used in the discriminant analysis of RNA-Seq data. R code is available at http://www.comp.hkbu.edu.hk/~xwan/NBLDA.R or https://github.com/yangchadam/NBLDA.

Keywords: Linear discriminant analysis; Negative binomial distribution; RNA-Seq.

MeSH terms

  • Bayes Theorem
  • Binomial Distribution
  • Discriminant Analysis*
  • Humans
  • RNA / genetics*
  • Sequence Analysis, RNA / methods*
  • Transcriptome

Substances

  • RNA