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Creators/Authors contains: "Engelhardt, Barbara_E"

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  1. Abstract BackgroundSingle-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) technologies allow for the study of gene expression in individual cells. Often, it is of interest to understand how transcriptional activity is associated with cell-specific covariates, such as cell type, genotype, or measures of cell health. Traditional approaches for this type of association mapping assume independence between the outcome variables (or genes), and perform a separate regression for each. However, these methods are computationally costly and ignore the substantial correlation structure of gene expression. Furthermore, count-based scRNA-seq data pose challenges for traditional models based on Gaussian assumptions. ResultsWe aim to resolve these issues by developing a reduced-rank regression model that identifies low-dimensional linear associations between a large number of cell-specific covariates and high-dimensional gene expression readouts. Our probabilistic model uses a Poisson likelihood in order to account for the unique structure of scRNA-seq counts. We demonstrate the performance of our model using simulations, and we apply our model to a scRNA-seq dataset, a spatial gene expression dataset, and a bulk RNA-seq dataset to show its behavior in three distinct analyses. ConclusionWe show that our statistical modeling approach, which is based on reduced-rank regression, captures associations between gene expression and cell- and sample-specific covariates by leveraging low-dimensional representations of transcriptional states. 
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  2. Abstract Histopathological images are used to characterize complex phenotypes such as tumor stage. Our goal is to associate features of stained tissue images with high-dimensional genomic markers. We use convolutional autoencoders and sparse canonical correlation analysis (CCA) on paired histological images and bulk gene expression to identify subsets of genes whose expression levels in a tissue sample correlate with subsets of morphological features from the corresponding sample image. We apply our approach, ImageCCA, to two TCGA data sets, and find gene sets associated with the structure of the extracellular matrix and cell wall infrastructure, implicating uncharacterized genes in extracellular processes. We find sets of genes associated with specific cell types, including neuronal cells and cells of the immune system. We apply ImageCCA to the GTEx v6 data, and find image features that capture population variation in thyroid and in colon tissues associated with genetic variants (image morphology QTLs, or imQTLs), suggesting that genetic variation regulates population variation in tissue morphological traits. 
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