Unraveling gene function is pivotal to understanding the signaling cascades that control plant development and stress responses. As experimental profiling is costly and labor intensive, there is a clear need for high-confidence computational annotation. In contrast to detailed gene-specific functional information, transcriptomics data are widely available for both model and crop species. Here, we describe a novel automated function prediction method, which leverages complementary information from multiple expression datasets by analyzing study-specific gene co-expression networks. First, we benchmarked the prediction performance on recently characterized Arabidopsis thaliana genes, and showed that our method outperforms state-of-the-art expression-based approaches. Next, we predicted biological process annotations for known (n = 15 790) and unknown (n = 11 865) genes in A. thaliana and validated our predictions using experimental protein-DNA and protein-protein interaction data (covering >220 000 interactions in total), obtaining a set of high-confidence functional annotations. Our method assigned at least one validated annotation to 5054 (42.6%) unknown genes, and at least one novel validated function to 3408 (53.0%) genes with computational annotations only. These omics-supported functional annotations shed light on a variety of developmental processes and molecular responses, such as flower and root development, defense responses to fungi and bacteria, and phytohormone signaling, and help fill the information gap on biological process annotations in Arabidopsis. An in-depth analysis of two context-specific networks, modeling seed development and response to water deprivation, shows how previously uncharacterized genes function within the respective networks. Moreover, our automated function prediction approach can be applied in future studies to facilitate gene discovery for crop improvement.
Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana; co-expression; gene function; networks; regulation of gene expression.
© 2021 Society for Experimental Biology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.