Nm-Nano: a machine learning framework for transcriptome-wide single-molecule mapping of 2´-O-methylation (Nm) sites in nanopore direct RNA sequencing datasets

Autor: Doaa Hassan, Aditya Ariyur, Swapna Vidhur Daulatabad, Quoseena Mir, Sarath Chandra Janga
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: RNA Biology, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 560-574 (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 15476286
1555-8584
1547-6286
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2024.2352192
Popis: 2´-O-methylation (Nm) is one of the most abundant modifications found in both mRNAs and noncoding RNAs. It contributes to many biological processes, such as the normal functioning of tRNA, the protection of mRNA against degradation by the decapping and exoribonuclease (DXO) protein, and the biogenesis and specificity of rRNA. Recent advancements in single-molecule sequencing techniques for long read RNA sequencing data offered by Oxford Nanopore technologies have enabled the direct detection of RNA modifications from sequencing data. In this study, we propose a bio-computational framework, Nm-Nano, for predicting the presence of Nm sites in direct RNA sequencing data generated from two human cell lines. The Nm-Nano framework integrates two supervised machine learning (ML) models for predicting Nm sites: Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) and Random Forest (RF) with K-mer embedding. Evaluation on benchmark datasets from direct RNA sequecing of HeLa and HEK293 cell lines, demonstrates high accuracy (99% with XGBoost and 92% with RF) in identifying Nm sites. Deploying Nm-Nano on HeLa and HEK293 cell lines reveals genes that are frequently modified with Nm. In HeLa cell lines, 125 genes are identified as frequently Nm-modified, showing enrichment in 30 ontologies related to immune response and cellular processes. In HEK293 cell lines, 61 genes are identified as frequently Nm-modified, with enrichment in processes like glycolysis and protein localization. These findings underscore the diverse regulatory roles of Nm modifications in metabolic pathways, protein degradation, and cellular processes. The source code of Nm-Nano can be freely accessed at https://github.com/Janga-Lab/Nm-Nano.
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