Effect of abiotic and biotic stress factors analysis using machine learning methods in zebrafish.

Journal: Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part D, Genomics & proteomics
PMID:

Abstract

In order to understand the mechanisms underlying stress responses, meta-analysis of transcriptome is made to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and their biological, molecular and cellular mechanisms in response to stressors. The present study is aimed at identifying the effect of abiotic and biotic stress factors, and it is found that several stress responsive genes are common for both abiotic and biotic stress factors in zebrafish. The meta-analysis of micro-array studies revealed that almost 4.7% i.e., 108 common DEGs are differentially regulated between abiotic and biotic stresses. This shows that there is a global coordination and fine-tuning of gene regulation in response to these two types of challenges. We also performed dimension reduction methods, principal component analysis, and partial least squares discriminant analysis which are able to segregate abiotic and biotic stresses into separate entities. The supervised machine learning model, recursive-support vector machine, could classify abiotic and biotic stresses with 100% accuracy using a subset of DEGs. Beside these methods, the random forests decision tree model classified five out of 8 stress conditions with high accuracy. Finally, Functional enrichment analysis revealed the different gene ontology terms, transcription factors and miRNAs factors in the regulation of stress responses.

Authors

  • Rajasekar Gutha
    Division of Animal Biotechnology, Dept of Biotechnology, School of Herbal Studies and Naturo Sciences, Dravidian University, Kuppam, 517426 A.P., India.
  • Suresh Yarrappagaari
    Division of Animal Biotechnology, Dept of Biotechnology, School of Herbal Studies and Naturo Sciences, Dravidian University, Kuppam, 517426 A.P., India.
  • Lavanya Thopireddy
    Dept of Zoology, Government Degree College, Kuppam, 517426, A.P., India.
  • Kesireddy Sathyavelu Reddy
    Dept of Zoology, Sri Venkateswara University, Tirupati, 517502, A.P., India.
  • Rajeswara Reddy Saddala
    Division of Animal Biotechnology, Dept of Biotechnology, School of Herbal Studies and Naturo Sciences, Dravidian University, Kuppam, 517426 A.P., India. Electronic address: drrajeswarareddy@dravidianuniversity.ac.in.