AI Article Synopsis

  • RNA-sequencing technology aids in understanding miRNA regulation in diseases like cancer, but existing methods often struggle with sample-specific inference due to sample heterogeneity.
  • A new framework called Scan has been developed, integrating 27 network inference methods to effectively analyze tissue and cell-specific miRNA regulation from both bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data.
  • Scan enhances prediction accuracy by using prior miRNA target information and allows the construction of correlation networks, ultimately improving our understanding of miRNA regulation on an individual sample level.

Article Abstract

Background: RNA-sequencing technology provides an effective tool for understanding miRNA regulation in complex human diseases, including cancers. A large number of computational methods have been developed to make use of bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data to identify miRNA regulations at the resolution of multiple samples (i.e. group of cells or tissues). However, due to the heterogeneity of individual samples, there is a strong need to infer miRNA regulation specific to individual samples to uncover miRNA regulation at the single-sample resolution level.

Results: Here, we develop a framework, Scan, for scanning sample-specific miRNA regulation. Since a single network inference method or strategy cannot perform well for all types of new data, Scan incorporates 27 network inference methods and two strategies to infer tissue-specific or cell-specific miRNA regulation from bulk or single-cell RNA-sequencing data. Results on bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data demonstrate the effectiveness of Scan in inferring sample-specific miRNA regulation. Moreover, we have found that incorporating the prior information of miRNA targets can generally improve the accuracy of miRNA target prediction. In addition, Scan can contribute to construct cell/tissue correlation networks and recover aggregate miRNA regulatory networks. Finally, the comparison results have shown that the performance of network inference methods is likely to be data-specific, and selecting optimal network inference methods is required for more accurate prediction of miRNA targets.

Conclusions: Scan provides a useful method to help infer sample-specific miRNA regulation for new data, benchmark new network inference methods and deepen the understanding of miRNA regulation at the resolution of individual samples.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11438147PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12915-024-02020-xDOI Listing

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