Cross-Ontology multi-level association rule mining in the Gene Ontology

PLoS One. 2012;7(10):e47411. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0047411. Epub 2012 Oct 12.

Abstract

The Gene Ontology (GO) has become the internationally accepted standard for representing function, process, and location aspects of gene products. The wealth of GO annotation data provides a valuable source of implicit knowledge of relationships among these aspects. We describe a new method for association rule mining to discover implicit co-occurrence relationships across the GO sub-ontologies at multiple levels of abstraction. Prior work on association rule mining in the GO has concentrated on mining knowledge at a single level of abstraction and/or between terms from the same sub-ontology. We have developed a bottom-up generalization procedure called Cross-Ontology Data Mining-Level by Level (COLL) that takes into account the structure and semantics of the GO, generates generalized transactions from annotation data and mines interesting multi-level cross-ontology association rules. We applied our method on publicly available chicken and mouse GO annotation datasets and mined 5368 and 3959 multi-level cross ontology rules from the two datasets respectively. We show that our approach discovers more and higher quality association rules from the GO as evaluated by biologists in comparison to previously published methods. Biologically interesting rules discovered by our method reveal unknown and surprising knowledge about co-occurring GO terms.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Animals
  • Chickens
  • Computational Biology / methods*
  • Data Mining / methods*
  • Databases, Genetic*
  • Mice
  • Molecular Sequence Annotation / methods*

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under awards number EPS 0903787 and EPS 1006883 and by the U.S. Department of Agriculture under award 2007-35205-17941. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.