Estimating Cell-type-specific Gene Co-expression Networks from Bulk Gene Expression Data with an Application to Alzheimer's Disease

Hongyu Zhao (Yale University)



Inferring and characterizing gene co-expression networks has led to important insights on the molecular mechanisms of complex diseases. Most co-expression analyses to date have been performed on gene expression data collected from bulk tissues with different cell type compositions across samples. As a result, the co-expression estimates only offer an aggregate view of the underlying gene regulations and can be confounded by heterogeneity in cell type compositions, failing to reveal gene coordination that may be distinct across different cell types. In this talk, we describe a flexible framework for estimating cell-type specific gene co-expression networks from bulk sample data, without making specific assumptions on the distributions of gene expression profiles in different cell types. We develop a novel sparse least squares estimator, referred to as CSNet, that is efficient to implement and has good theoretical properties. Using CSNet, we analyzed the bulk gene expression data from a cohort study on Alzheimer's disease and identified previously unknown cell-type-specific co-expressions among Alzheimer's disease risk genes, suggesting cell-type-specific disease pathology for Alzheimer's disease. This is joint work with Chang Su and Emma Jingfei Zhang.


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