Abstract
RATIONALE Neurological molecular analyses such as transcriptomics, epigenetics, and genome-wide association studies must be assessed in the context of the human brain in order to generate biologically meaningful inferences. It is often difficult to access primary human brain tissue; therefore, approximations are made using in vitro modeling or by identifying disease-associated genes from DNA extracted from blood. Gene sets from these studies are then compared to the post-mortem human brain to provide an assessment of the brain region and the developmental time point that a gene set is most closely associated with. However, most analyses of postmortem datasets are achieved by building new computational tools each time in-house, which can cause discrepancies from study to study, indicating that the field is in need of a user-friendly suite of tools to examine spatiotemporal expression with respect to the postmortem brain. Such a tool will be of use to the molecular interrogation of neurological and psychiatric disorders, with direct advantages for the disease-modeling and human genetics communities.
RESULTS We have developed brainImageR, an R package that calculates both the spatial and temporal association of a dataset with post-mortem gene expression data from the Allen Brain Atlas. BrainImageR performs a robust analysis of gene set enrichment to identify enriched anatomical regions, provides a global high-resolution visualization of these enrichments across the human brain, and predicts when in developmental time the sample is most closely matched to, a task that has become increasingly important in the field of in vitro neuronal modeling. These functionalities of brainImageR enable a quick and efficient characterization of a given dataset across normal human brain development.
AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION BrainImageR is released under the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 license and the source code can be downloaded through github at https://github.com/saralinker/brainImageR.
CONTACT gage{at}salk.edu
Footnotes
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