Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David L. Wild is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David L. Wild.


The Plant Cell | 2011

High-Resolution Temporal Profiling of Transcripts during Arabidopsis Leaf Senescence Reveals a Distinct Chronology of Processes and Regulation

Emily Breeze; Elizabeth Harrison; Stuart McHattie; Linda Karen Hughes; Richard Hickman; Claire Hill; Steven John Kiddle; Youn-sung Kim; Christopher A. Penfold; Dafyd J. Jenkins; Cunjin Zhang; Karl Morris; Carol E. Jenner; Stephen D. Jackson; Brian Thomas; Alex Tabrett; Roxane Legaie; Jonathan D. Moore; David L. Wild; Sascha Ott; David A. Rand; Jim Beynon; Katherine J. Denby; A. Mead; Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston

This work presents a high-resolution time-course analysis of gene expression during development of a leaf from expansion through senescence. Enrichment in ontologies, sequence motifs, and transcription factor families within genes showing altered expression over time identified both metabolic pathways and potential regulators active at different stages of leaf development and senescence. Leaf senescence is an essential developmental process that impacts dramatically on crop yields and involves altered regulation of thousands of genes and many metabolic and signaling pathways, resulting in major changes in the leaf. The regulation of senescence is complex, and although senescence regulatory genes have been characterized, there is little information on how these function in the global control of the process. We used microarray analysis to obtain a high-resolution time-course profile of gene expression during development of a single leaf over a 3-week period to senescence. A complex experimental design approach and a combination of methods were used to extract high-quality replicated data and to identify differentially expressed genes. The multiple time points enable the use of highly informative clustering to reveal distinct time points at which signaling and metabolic pathways change. Analysis of motif enrichment, as well as comparison of transcription factor (TF) families showing altered expression over the time course, identify clear groups of TFs active at different stages of leaf development and senescence. These data enable connection of metabolic processes, signaling pathways, and specific TF activity, which will underpin the development of network models to elucidate the process of senescence.


The Plant Cell | 2012

Arabidopsis defense against Botrytis cinerea: chronology and regulation deciphered by high-resolution temporal transcriptomic analysis

Oliver P. Windram; Priyadharshini Madhou; Stuart McHattie; Claire Hill; Richard Hickman; Emma J. Cooke; Dafyd J. Jenkins; Christopher A. Penfold; Laura Baxter; Emily Breeze; Steven John Kiddle; Johanna Rhodes; Susanna Atwell; Daniel J. Kliebenstein; Youn-sung Kim; Oliver Stegle; Karsten M. Borgwardt; Cunjin Zhang; Alex Tabrett; Roxane Legaie; Jonathan D. Moore; Bärbel Finkenstädt; David L. Wild; A. Mead; David A. Rand; Jim Beynon; Sascha Ott; Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston; Katherine J. Denby

The authors generated a high-resolution time series of Arabidopsis thaliana gene expression following infection with the fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea. Computational analysis of this large data set identified the timing of specific processes and regulatory events in the host plant and showed a role for the transcription factor TGA3 in the defense response against the fungal pathogen. Transcriptional reprogramming forms a major part of a plant’s response to pathogen infection. Many individual components and pathways operating during plant defense have been identified, but our knowledge of how these different components interact is still rudimentary. We generated a high-resolution time series of gene expression profiles from a single Arabidopsis thaliana leaf during infection by the necrotrophic fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea. Approximately one-third of the Arabidopsis genome is differentially expressed during the first 48 h after infection, with the majority of changes in gene expression occurring before significant lesion development. We used computational tools to obtain a detailed chronology of the defense response against B. cinerea, highlighting the times at which signaling and metabolic processes change, and identify transcription factor families operating at different times after infection. Motif enrichment and network inference predicted regulatory interactions, and testing of one such prediction identified a role for TGA3 in defense against necrotrophic pathogens. These data provide an unprecedented level of detail about transcriptional changes during a defense response and are suited to systems biology analyses to generate predictive models of the gene regulatory networks mediating the Arabidopsis response to B. cinerea.


BMC Genomics | 2010

The dynamic architecture of the metabolic switch in Streptomyces coelicolor

Kay Nieselt; Florian Battke; Alexander Herbig; Per Bruheim; Alexander Wentzel; Øyvind Mejdell Jakobsen; Håvard Sletta; Mohammad T. Alam; Maria Elena Merlo; Jonathan D. Moore; Walid A.M. Omara; Edward R. Morrissey; Miguel A. Juarez-Hermosillo; Antonio Rodríguez-García; Merle Nentwich; Louise Thomas; Mudassar Iqbal; Roxane Legaie; William H. Gaze; Gregory L. Challis; Ritsert C. Jansen; Lubbert Dijkhuizen; David A. Rand; David L. Wild; Michael Bonin; Jens Reuther; Wolfgang Wohlleben; Margaret C. M. Smith; Nigel John Burroughs; Juan F. Martín

BackgroundDuring the lifetime of a fermenter culture, the soil bacterium S. coelicolor undergoes a major metabolic switch from exponential growth to antibiotic production. We have studied gene expression patterns during this switch, using a specifically designed Affymetrix genechip and a high-resolution time-series of fermenter-grown samples.ResultsSurprisingly, we find that the metabolic switch actually consists of multiple finely orchestrated switching events. Strongly coherent clusters of genes show drastic changes in gene expression already many hours before the classically defined transition phase where the switch from primary to secondary metabolism was expected. The main switch in gene expression takes only 2 hours, and changes in antibiotic biosynthesis genes are delayed relative to the metabolic rearrangements. Furthermore, global variation in morphogenesis genes indicates an involvement of cell differentiation pathways in the decision phase leading up to the commitment to antibiotic biosynthesis.ConclusionsOur study provides the first detailed insights into the complex sequence of early regulatory events during and preceding the major metabolic switch in S. coelicolor, which will form the starting point for future attempts at engineering antibiotic production in a biotechnological setting.


Interface Focus | 2011

How to infer gene networks from expression profiles, revisited

Christopher A. Penfold; David L. Wild

Inferring the topology of a gene-regulatory network (GRN) from genome-scale time-series measurements of transcriptional change has proved useful for disentangling complex biological processes. To address the challenges associated with this inference, a number of competing approaches have previously been used, including examples from information theory, Bayesian and dynamic Bayesian networks (DBNs), and ordinary differential equation (ODE) or stochastic differential equation. The performance of these competing approaches have previously been assessed using a variety of in silico and in vivo datasets. Here, we revisit this work by assessing the performance of more recent network inference algorithms, including a novel non-parametric learning approach based upon nonlinear dynamical systems. For larger GRNs, containing hundreds of genes, these non-parametric approaches more accurately infer network structures than do traditional approaches, but at significant computational cost. For smaller systems, DBNs are competitive with the non-parametric approaches with respect to computational time and accuracy, and both of these approaches appear to be more accurate than Granger causality-based methods and those using simple ODEs models.


Bioinformatics | 2005

Biomarker discovery in microarray gene expression data with Gaussian processes

Wei Chu; Zoubin Ghahramani; Francesco Falciani; David L. Wild

MOTIVATION In clinical practice, pathological phenotypes are often labelled with ordinal scales rather than binary, e.g. the Gleason grading system for tumour cell differentiation. However, in the literature of microarray analysis, these ordinal labels have been rarely treated in a principled way. This paper describes a gene selection algorithm based on Gaussian processes to discover consistent gene expression patterns associated with ordinal clinical phenotypes. The technique of automatic relevance determination is applied to represent the significance level of the genes in a Bayesian inference framework. RESULTS The usefulness of the proposed algorithm for ordinal labels is demonstrated by the gene expression signature associated with the Gleason score for prostate cancer data. Our results demonstrate how multi-gene markers that may be initially developed with a diagnostic or prognostic application in mind are also useful as an investigative tool to reveal associations between specific molecular and cellular events and features of tumour physiology. Our algorithm can also be applied to microarray data with binary labels with results comparable to other methods in the literature.


Plant Journal | 2013

A local regulatory network around three NAC transcription factors in stress responses and senescence in Arabidopsis leaves

Richard Hickman; Claire Hill; Christopher A. Penfold; Emily Breeze; Laura Bowden; Jonathan D. Moore; Peijun Zhang; Alison C. Jackson; Emma J. Cooke; Findlay Bewicke-Copley; A. Mead; Jim Beynon; David L. Wild; Katherine J. Denby; Sascha Ott; Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston

Summary A model is presented describing the gene regulatory network surrounding three similar NAC transcription factors that have roles in Arabidopsis leaf senescence and stress responses. ANAC019, ANAC055 and ANAC072 belong to the same clade of NAC domain genes and have overlapping expression patterns. A combination of promoter DNA/protein interactions identified using yeast 1-hybrid analysis and modelling using gene expression time course data has been applied to predict the regulatory network upstream of these genes. Similarities and divergence in regulation during a variety of stress responses are predicted by different combinations of upstream transcription factors binding and also by the modelling. Mutant analysis with potential upstream genes was used to test and confirm some of the predicted interactions. Gene expression analysis in mutants of ANAC019 and ANAC055 at different times during leaf senescence has revealed a distinctly different role for each of these genes. Yeast 1-hybrid analysis is shown to be a valuable tool that can distinguish clades of binding proteins and be used to test and quantify protein binding to predicted promoter motifs.


Bioinformatics | 2012

Bayesian correlated clustering to integrate multiple datasets

Paul Kirk; Jim E. Griffin; Richard S. Savage; Zoubin Ghahramani; David L. Wild

Motivation: The integration of multiple datasets remains a key challenge in systems biology and genomic medicine. Modern high-throughput technologies generate a broad array of different data types, providing distinct—but often complementary—information. We present a Bayesian method for the unsupervised integrative modelling of multiple datasets, which we refer to as MDI (Multiple Dataset Integration). MDI can integrate information from a wide range of different datasets and data types simultaneously (including the ability to model time series data explicitly using Gaussian processes). Each dataset is modelled using a Dirichlet-multinomial allocation (DMA) mixture model, with dependencies between these models captured through parameters that describe the agreement among the datasets. Results: Using a set of six artificially constructed time series datasets, we show that MDI is able to integrate a significant number of datasets simultaneously, and that it successfully captures the underlying structural similarity between the datasets. We also analyse a variety of real Saccharomyces cerevisiae datasets. In the two-dataset case, we show that MDI’s performance is comparable with the present state-of-the-art. We then move beyond the capabilities of current approaches and integrate gene expression, chromatin immunoprecipitation–chip and protein–protein interaction data, to identify a set of protein complexes for which genes are co-regulated during the cell cycle. Comparisons to other unsupervised data integration techniques—as well as to non-integrative approaches—demonstrate that MDI is competitive, while also providing information that would be difficult or impossible to extract using other methods. Availability: A Matlab implementation of MDI is available from http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/systemsbiology/research/software/. Contact: [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Journal of Computational Biology | 2010

A Robust Bayesian Two-Sample Test for Detecting Intervals of Differential Gene Expression in Microarray Time Series

Oliver Stegle; Katherine J. Denby; Emma J. Cooke; David L. Wild; Zoubin Ghahramani; Karsten M. Borgwardt

Understanding the regulatory mechanisms that are responsible for an organisms response to environmental change is an important issue in molecular biology. A first and important step towards this goal is to detect genes whose expression levels are affected by altered external conditions. A range of methods to test for differential gene expression, both in static as well as in time-course experiments, have been proposed. While these tests answer the question whether a gene is differentially expressed, they do not explicitly address the question when a gene is differentially expressed, although this information may provide insights into the course and causal structure of regulatory programs. In this article, we propose a two-sample test for identifying intervals of differential gene expression in microarray time series. Our approach is based on Gaussian process regression, can deal with arbitrary numbers of replicates, and is robust with respect to outliers. We apply our algorithm to study the response of Arabidopsis thaliana genes to an infection by a fungal pathogen using a microarray time series dataset covering 30,336 gene probes at 24 observed time points. In classification experiments, our test compares favorably with existing methods and provides additional insights into time-dependent differential expression.


The Plant Cell | 2015

Transcriptional Dynamics Driving MAMP-Triggered Immunity and Pathogen Effector-Mediated Immunosuppression in Arabidopsis Leaves Following Infection with Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato DC3000

Laura A. Lewis; Krzysztof Polanski; Marta de Torres-Zabala; Siddharth Jayaraman; Laura Bowden; Jonathan D. Moore; Christopher A. Penfold; Dafyd J. Jenkins; Claire Hill; Laura Baxter; Satish Kulasekaran; William Truman; George R. Littlejohn; Justyna Prusinska; A. Mead; Jens Steinbrenner; Richard Hickman; David A. Rand; David L. Wild; Sascha Ott; Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston; Nicholas Smirnoff; Jim Beynon; Katherine J. Denby; Murray Grant

High-resolution microarray analysis of Pseudomonas syringae-inoculated Arabidopsis leaves reveals transcriptional dynamics underpinning basal defense and effector modulation leading to disease development. Transcriptional reprogramming is integral to effective plant defense. Pathogen effectors act transcriptionally and posttranscriptionally to suppress defense responses. A major challenge to understanding disease and defense responses is discriminating between transcriptional reprogramming associated with microbial-associated molecular pattern (MAMP)-triggered immunity (MTI) and that orchestrated by effectors. A high-resolution time course of genome-wide expression changes following challenge with Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato DC3000 and the nonpathogenic mutant strain DC3000hrpA- allowed us to establish causal links between the activities of pathogen effectors and suppression of MTI and infer with high confidence a range of processes specifically targeted by effectors. Analysis of this information-rich data set with a range of computational tools provided insights into the earliest transcriptional events triggered by effector delivery, regulatory mechanisms recruited, and biological processes targeted. We show that the majority of genes contributing to disease or defense are induced within 6 h postinfection, significantly before pathogen multiplication. Suppression of chloroplast-associated genes is a rapid MAMP-triggered defense response, and suppression of genes involved in chromatin assembly and induction of ubiquitin-related genes coincide with pathogen-induced abscisic acid accumulation. Specific combinations of promoter motifs are engaged in fine-tuning the MTI response and active transcriptional suppression at specific promoter configurations by P. syringae.


Bioinformatics | 2012

Nonparametric Bayesian inference for perturbed and orthologous gene regulatory networks

Christopher A. Penfold; Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston; Katherine J. Denby; David L. Wild

Motivation: The generation of time series transcriptomic datasets collected under multiple experimental conditions has proven to be a powerful approach for disentangling complex biological processes, allowing for the reverse engineering of gene regulatory networks (GRNs). Most methods for reverse engineering GRNs from multiple datasets assume that each of the time series were generated from networks with identical topology. In this study, we outline a hierarchical, non-parametric Bayesian approach for reverse engineering GRNs using multiple time series that can be applied in a number of novel situations including: (i) where different, but overlapping sets of transcription factors are expected to bind in the different experimental conditions; that is, where switching events could potentially arise under the different treatments and (ii) for inference in evolutionary related species in which orthologous GRNs exist. More generally, the method can be used to identify context-specific regulation by leveraging time series gene expression data alongside methods that can identify putative lists of transcription factors or transcription factor targets. Results: The hierarchical inference outperforms related (but non-hierarchical) approaches when the networks used to generate the data were identical, and performs comparably even when the networks used to generate data were independent. The method was subsequently used alongside yeast one hybrid and microarray time series data to infer potential transcriptional switches in Arabidopsis thaliana response to stress. The results confirm previous biological studies and allow for additional insights into gene regulation under various abiotic stresses. Availability: The methods outlined in this article have been implemented in Matlab and are available on request. Contact: [email protected] Supplementary Information: Supplementary data is available for this article.

Collaboration


Dive into the David L. Wild's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexei A. Podtelezhnikov

Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge