RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Bipartite Tight Spectral Clustering (BiTSC) Algorithm for Identifying Conserved Gene Co-clusters in Two Species JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 865378 DO 10.1101/865378 A1 Yidan Eden Sun A1 Heather J. Zhou A1 Jingyi Jessica Li YR 2020 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/02/09/865378.abstract AB Gene clustering is a widely-used technique that has enabled computational prediction of unknown gene functions within a species. However, it remains a challenge to refine gene function prediction by leveraging evolutionarily conserved genes in another species. This challenge calls for a new computational algorithm to identify gene co-clusters in two species, so that genes in each co-cluster exhibit similar expression levels in each species and strong conservation between the species. Here we develop the bipartite tight spectral clustering (BiTSC) algorithm, which identifies gene co-clusters in two species based on gene orthology information and gene expression data. BiTSC novelly implements a formulation that encodes gene orthology as a bipartite network and gene expression data as node covariates. This formulation allows BiTSC to adopt and combine the advantages of multiple unsupervised learning techniques: kernel enhancement, bipartite spectral clustering, consensus clustering, tight clustering, and hierarchical clustering. As a result, BiTSC is a flexible and robust algorithm capable of identifying informative gene co-clusters without forcing all genes into co-clusters. Another advantage of BiTSC is that it does not rely on any distributional assumptions. Beyond cross-species gene co-clustering, BiTSC also has wide applications as a general algorithm for identifying tight node co-clusters in any bipartite network with node covariates. We demonstrate the accuracy and robustness of BiTSC through comprehensive simulation studies. In a real data example, we use BiTSC to identify conserved gene co-clusters of D. melanogaster and C. elegans, and we perform a series of downstream analysis to both validate BiTSC and verify the biological significance of the identified co-clusters.