Microarray phenotyping in Dictyostelium reveals a regulon of chemotaxis genes

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Abstract

Motivation: Coordinate regulation of gene expression can provide information on gene function. To begin a large-scale analysis of Dictyostelium gene function, we clustered genes based on their expression in wild-type and mutant strains and analyzed their functions. Results: We found 17 modes of wild-type gene expression and refined the m into 57 submodes considering mutant data. Annotation analyses revealed correlations between co-expression and function and an unexpected correlation between expression and function of genes involved in various aspects of chemotaxis. Co-regulation of chemotaxis genes was also found in published data from neutrophils. To test the predictive power of the analysis, we examined the phenotypes of mutations in seven co-regulated genes that had no published role in chemotaxis. Six mutants exhibited chemotaxis defects, supporting the idea that function can be inferred from co-expression. The clustering and annotation analyses provide a public resource for Dictyostelium functional genomics. © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Booth, E. O., Van Driessche, N., Zhuchenko, O., Kuspa, A., & Shaulsky, G. (2005). Microarray phenotyping in Dictyostelium reveals a regulon of chemotaxis genes. Bioinformatics, 21(24), 4371–4377. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bti726

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