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Bioinformatics Advance Access originally published online on January 19, 2007
Bioinformatics 2007 23(5):589-596; doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btl680
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Automatic recognition and annotation of gene expression patterns of fly embryos

Jie Zhou 1,{dagger} and Hanchuan Peng 2,*,{dagger}

1Department of Computer Science, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL 60115 and 2Janelia Farm Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Ashburn, VA 200147, USA

*To whom correspondence should be addressed.


   Abstract

Motivation: Gene expression patterns obtained by in situ mRNA hybridization provide important information about different genes during Drosophila embryogenesis. So far, annotations of these images are done by manually assigning a subset of anatomy ontology terms to an image. This time-consuming process depends heavily on the consistency of experts.

Results: We develop a system to automatically annotate a fruitfly's embryonic tissue in which a gene has expression. We formulate the task as an image pattern recognition problem. For a new fly embryo image, our system answers two questions: (1) Which stage range does an image belong to? (2) Which annotations should be assigned to an image? We propose to identify the wavelet embryo features by multi-resolution 2D wavelet discrete transform, followed by min-redundancy max-relevance feature selection, which yields optimal distinguishing features for an annotation. We then construct a series of parallel bi-class predictors to solve the multi-objective annotation problem since each image may correspond to multiple annotations.

Supplementary information: The complete annotation prediction results are available at: http://www.cs.niu.edu/~jzhou/papers/fruitfly and http://research.janelia.org/peng/proj/fly_embryo_annotation/. The datasets used in experiments will be available upon request to the correspondence author.

Contact: jzhou{at}cs.niu.edu and pengh{at}janelia.hhmi.org

{dagger}The authors wish it to be known that, in their opinion, the first two authors should be regarded as joint First Authors.


Received on October 3, 2006; revised on December 10, 2006; accepted on January 5, 2007

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