A maximum-likelihood approach for building cell-type trees by lifting

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Abstract

Background: In cell differentiation, a less specialized cell differentiates into a more specialized one, even though all cells in one organism have (almost) the same genome. Epigenetic factors such as histone modifications are known to play a significant role in cell differentiation. We previously introduce cell-type trees to represent the differentiation of cells into more specialized types, a representation that partakes of both ontogeny and phylogeny. Results: We propose a maximum-likelihood (ML) approach to build cell-type trees and show that this ML approach outperforms our earlier distance-based and parsimony-based approaches. We then study the reconstruction of ancestral cell types; since both ancestral and derived cell types can coexist in adult organisms, we propose a lifting algorithm to infer internal nodes. We present results on our lifting algorithm obtained both through simulations and on real datasets. Conclusions: We show that our ML-based approach outperforms previously proposed techniques such as distance-based and parsimony-based methods. We show our lifting-based approach works well on both simulated and real data.

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Nair, N. U., Hunter, L., Shao, M., Grnarova, P., Lin, Y., Bucher, P., & Bernard, B. M. (2016). A maximum-likelihood approach for building cell-type trees by lifting. BMC Genomics, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-2297-3

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