ASTER: A Method to Predict Clinically Relevant Synthetic Lethal Genetic Interactions
Overview
Medical Informatics
Authors
Affiliations
A Synthetic Lethal (SL) interaction is a functional relationship between two genes or functional entities where the loss of either entity is viable but the loss of both is lethal. Such pairs can be used to develop targeted anticancer therapies with fewer side effects and reduced overtreatment. However, finding clinically relevant SL interactions remains challenging. Leveraging unified gene expression data of both disease-free and cancerous samples, we design a new technique based on statistical hypothesis testing, called ASTER, to identify SL pairs. We empirically find that the patterns of mutually exclusivity ASTER finds using genomic and transcriptomic data provides a strong signal of synthetic lethality. For large-scale multiple hypothesis testing, we develop an extension called ASTER++ that can utilize additional input gene features within the hypothesis testing framework. Our computational and functional experiments demonstrate the efficacy of ASTER in identifying SL pairs with potential therapeutic benefits.
Synthetic lethal connectivity and graph transformer improve synthetic lethality prediction.
Fan K, Gokbag B, Tang S, Li S, Huang Y, Wang L Brief Bioinform. 2024; 25(5).
PMID: 39210507 PMC: 11361842. DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbae425.
Synthetic lethal gene pairs: Experimental approaches and predictive models.
Tang S, Gokbag B, Fan K, Shao S, Huo Y, Wu X Front Genet. 2022; 13:961611.
PMID: 36531238 PMC: 9751344. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.961611.