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NAME

Bio::SAGE::Comparison - Compares data from serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) libraries.

SYNOPSIS

  use Bio::SAGE::Comparison;
  $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();

DESCRIPTION

This module provides several tools for comparing data generated from serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) libraries.

README

BACKGROUND

Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) is a molecular technique for generating a near-global snapshot of a cell population’s transcriptome. Briefly, the technique extracts short sequences at defined positions of transcribed mRNA. These short sequences are then paired to form ditags. The ditags are concatamerized to form long sequences that are then cloned. The cloned DNA is then sequenced. Bioinformatic techniques are then employed to determine the original short tag sequences, and to derive their progenitor mRNA. The number of times a particular tag is observed can be used to quantitate the amount of a particular transcript. The original technique was described by Velculescu et al. (1995) and utilized an ~14bp sequence tag. A modified protocol was introduced by Saha et al. (2002) that produced ~21bp tags.

PURPOSE

This module facilitates the comparison of SAGE libraries. Specifically:

  1. Calculations for determining the statistical
     significance of expression differences.
  2. Dynamically convert longer-tag libraries to
     a shorter type for comparison (e.g. comparing
     a LongSAGE vs. a regular SAGE library).

Both regular SAGE (14mer tag) and LongSAGE (21mer tag) are supported by this module.

Statistical significance in library comparisons is calculated using the method described by Audic and Claverie (1997). Code was generated by directly porting the authors' original C source.

REFERENCES

  Velculescu V, Zhang L, Vogelstein B, Kinzler KW. (1995) 
  Serial analysis of gene expression. Science. 270:484-487.

  Saha S, Sparks AB, Rago C, Akmaev V, Wang CJ, Vogelstein B, 
  Kinzler KW, Velculescu V. (2002) Using the transcriptome 
  to annotate the genome. Nat. Biotechnol. 20:508-512.

  Audic S, Claverie JM. (1997) The significance of digital
  gene expression profiles. Genome Res. 7:986-995.

INSTALLATION

Follow the usual steps for installing any Perl module:

  perl Makefile.PL
  make test
  make install

PREREQUISITES

None.

CHANGES

  1.00 2004.05.24 - Initial release.

VARIABLES

Settings

    $DEBUG

      Prints debugging output if value if >= 1.

CLASS METHODS

new

Constructor for a new Bio::SAGE::Comparison object.

Arguments

  None.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();

calculate_significance $x, $y, $Nx, $Ny, <$signedValue>

Determines the statistical significance of the difference in tag count (expression) between two libraries. This function uses the method described by Audic and Claverie (1997). This method can be called on an instantiated object, as well as statically.

Arguments

$x,$y

  The number of tags in the x- and y-axis 
  libraries, respectively.

$Nx,$Ny

  The total number of tags in the x- and y-axis
  libraries, respectively.

$signedValue (optional)

  A boolean value (>=1 is FALSE).  If this flag is
  set to TRUE, downregulated comparisons will return
  a both p-value and either +1, -1, or 0 to indicate
  up/down/same-regulation (i.e. -1 if the expression 
  ratio of tags in the x-axis library(s) is greater 
  than that of the y-axis library(s)).  This flag
  is FALSE by default.

Returns

  The p-value for the observation.  A lower number is
  more significant.  Typically, observations with
  p <= 0.05 are considered statistically significant.

  If $signedValue is set to TRUE, the function also
  returns a 0, -1 or +1 to indicate same/down/up-regulation.

Usage

  # the function is static, so it can be accessed directly
  my $p = Bio::SAGE::Comparison::calculate_significance( 3, 10, 50000, 60000 );

  # or:
  my ( $p, $sign ) = Bio::SAGE::Comparison::calculate_significance( 3, 10, 50000, 60000, 1 );
  if( $p <= 0.05 ) {
    if( $sign == +1 ) { print "Significantly upregulated.\n"; }
    if( $sign == -1 ) { print "Significantly downregulated.\n"; }
    if( $sign == 0 ) { die( "Same expression should never be significant!" ); }
  }

INSTANCE METHODS

load_library $handle

Takes a Perl handle to SAGE library data and prepares a tag data hash (format: [tag]<whitespace>[count]).

Arguments

$handle

  A Perl handle (ie. filehandle, STDIN, etc.) that
  can be used to read in SAGE library data.
    

Returns

  A hashref containing tag sequences
  as keys and the number of times that tag was
  observed as the value.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  my %data = %{$sage->load_library( *STDIN )};
  # print data in descending order of tag count
  map { print join( "\t", $_, $data{$_} ) . "\n"; } sort { $data{$b} <=> {$a} } keys %data;

add_library $label, \%tagData

Adds a library to this object.

Arguments

$label

  A unique label for this library data. This label can
  then be used to refer to the data.

\%tagData

  A hashref containing the library data. The keys
  are tag sequences, the values are tag counts. A 
  properly formatted hash can be created using
  load_library.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  my %data = %{$sage->load_library( *STDIN )};
  # or alternatively:
  my %data = ( 'AACGACTGTT' => 100,
               'CAGATACAAG' => 23,
               'AGATAAAGAC' => 45 );
  $sage->add_library( 'MYLIB', \%data );

get_library_labels

Gets the labels that identify the currently added libraries.

Arguments

None.

Returns

  An array of library labels.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  my %data = %{$sage->load_library( *STDIN )};
  $sage->add_library( 'MYLIB', \%data );
  print "LIBRARY_NAMES: " . join( ", " , $sage->get_library_labels() ) . "\n";

get_library_size $label

Gets the total number of tags (the sum of all observed tag counts for a library(s)).

Arguments

$label

  This can be: a) a string denoting the library label,
  b) a reference to a string denoting the library
  label, or c) an arrayref containing several
  library labels that are pooled to calculate total
  size.

Returns

  The total number of observed tags in the library(s)
  specified.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  my %data = %{$sage->load_library( *STDIN )};
  $sage->add_library( 'MYLIB', \%data );
  print "LIBRARY_SIZE: " . $sage->get_library_size( 'MYLIB' ) . "\n";

get_number_tag_sequences $label

Gets the number of discrete tag sequences present in the specified library(s).

Arguments

$label

  This can be: a) a string denoting the library label,
  b) a reference to a string denoting the library
  label, or c) an arrayref containing several
  library labels that are pooled to calculate the
  number of tag sequences.

Returns

  The number of different tags in the library(s)
  specified.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  my %data = %{$sage->load_library( *STDIN )};
  $sage->add_library( 'MYLIB', \%data );
  print "TAG_SEQUENCES: " . $sage->get_number_tag_sequences( 'MYLIB' ) . "\n";

get_library_comparison $x_axis_libraries, $y_axis_libraries

Creates a comparison between two libraries. This method returns a hash reference containing the library data and a p-value for determining statistical signifance.

If the libraries contain tags of different sizes (i.e. comparing a regular SAGE library vs. a LongSAGE library) the data is converted to the shortest tag length of the libraries specified prior to comparison.

Arguments

$x_axis_libraries,$y_axis_libraries

  Library labels for the x- and y-axis, respectively.

  This can be: a) a string denoting the library label,
  b) a reference to a string denoting the library
  label, or c) an arrayref containing several
  library labels that are pooled in the comparison.

Returns

  A hashref is returned where the keys are tag sequences, 
  and the values are hashrefs with the keys 'x' 
  (tags in x-axis library(s)), 'y' (tags in y-axis 
  library(s)), 'reg' (0,-1,+1 denoting same/down/up-regulation), 
  and 'p' (statistical significance).

  i.e. $HASH{$tag}->{'p'} = 0.05;

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  open( LIB1, "lib1.tags.txt" );
  $sage->add_library( 'LIB1', $sage->load_library( *LIB1 ) );
  close( LIB1 );
  open( LIB2, "lib2.tags.txt" );
  $sage->add_library( 'LIB2', $sage->load_library( *LIB2 ) );
  close( LIB2 );
  my %comparison = %{$sage->get_library_comparison( 'LIB1', 'LIB2' );
  # or alternatively:
  my %comparison = %{$sage->get_library_comparison( ['LIB1'], ['LIB2'] );
  # print results in ascending order of p-value (more significant first)
  foreach my $tag ( sort { $comparison{$a}->{'p'} <=> $comparison{$b}->{'p'} } keys %comparison ) {
       print join( "\t", $tag, map { $comparison{$tag}->{$_} } ( 'x','y','reg','p' ) ) . "\n";
  }

Prints a report based on the supplied comparison result hash.

Arguments

\%comparison

  A properly formed hashref containing library
  comparison results.  This structure can be created
  with get_library_comparison.

  A sample output looks like:

  Tag         N(x)    N(y)   reg  p
  AGATCAAGAT  3388    50     -1   0
  GATAACACTT  11481   186    -1   0
  TATAACACCA  4       607    1    4.1136713480649e-306
  ... etc.

Usage

  my $sage = Bio::SAGE::Comparison->new();
  # load library data
  # ...
  $sage->print_library_comparison( $sage->get_library_comparison( 'LIB1','LIB2' ) );

COPYRIGHT

Copyright(c)2004 Scott Zuyderduyn <scottz@bccrc.ca>. All rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

AUTHOR

Scott Zuyderduyn <scottz@bccrc.ca> BC Cancer Research Centre

VERSION

  1.00

SEE ALSO

perl(1).

TODO

  Nothing yet.

1 POD Error

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