p value for permutation test for gene-interaction data
1
0
Entering edit mode
3.8 years ago
pixie@bioinfo ★ 1.5k

Hello, I have a data for pair-wise interactions between genes. I have taken the top 1000 interactions (ordered based on some value) and found that X no. of interactions in which Gene_1 is hypo methylated and Gene_2 is Up-regulated.

My objective is to prove that the X no. of interactions (in the ordered set) is significantly higher than a random set of interactions. For this, I randomized the interactions 1000 times and calculated the interactions for which Gene1 is hypo methylated and Gene2 is Up-regulated. My question is how to get a p-value for this permutation? Kindly help. Thanks.

statistics • 1.1k views
ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
3.8 years ago

Let say you have X = number of interaction between Gene_1 (hypometh) and Gene_2 (up-reg) . After your permutation (N=1000) you will have 1000 values of simulated X_sim = number of interaction between Gene_1 (hypometh) and Gene_2 (up-reg)

In order to compute the p-value you compute the number of values of X_sim higher or equal than X , divided by the number of permutation (N=1000)

In R code (for the example X=20 )

set.seed(123) # for reproducibility
X <- 20
# generate X_sim based on a gaussian m=10 ; sd = 5
N <- 1000 # number of permutations
X_sim <- rnorm(n=N, mean = 10, sd = 5)
# plot the X_sim distribution and put X on the plot
plot(density(X_sim))
abline(v=20,col="red")
# compute p-value
p <- sum(X_sim >= X) / N
# p = 0.028

Thus p-value will be more "significant" if the X value goes towards the end of the X_sim distribution tail.

enter image description here

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

Thats great, Merci beaucoup!

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

Although it usually will not make much difference, I would add that there is an argument for estimating the permutation p-value adding 1 to the numerator and denominator (so that p-val = n + 1 / m + 1 where n is your number of hits higher or equal to your threshold and m is the number of permutations) (see this reference)

ADD REPLY

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 2736 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6