English

A tree-based kernel for densities and its applications in clustering DNase-seq profiles

Methodology 2026-05-19 v2 Applications

Abstract

Modeling multiple sampling densities within a hierarchical framework enables borrowing of information across samples. These density random effects can act as kernels in latent variable models to represent exchangeable subgroups or clusters. A key feature of these kernels is the (functional) covariance they induce, which determines how densities are grouped in mixture models. Our motivating problem is clustering chromatin accessibility profiles from high-throughput DNase-seq experiments to detect transcription factor (TF) binding. TF binding typically produces footprint profiles with spatial patterns, creating long-range dependency across genomic locations. Existing nonparametric hierarchical models impose restrictive covariance assumptions and cannot accommodate such dependencies, often leading to biologically uninformative clusters. We propose a nonparametric density kernel flexible enough to capture diverse covariance structures and adaptive to various spatial patterns of TF footprints. The kernel specifies dyadic tree splitting probabilities via a multivariate logit-normal model with a sparse precision matrix. Bayesian inference for latent variable models using this kernel is implemented through Gibbs sampling with Polya-Gamma augmentation. Extensive simulations show that our kernel substantially improves clustering accuracy. We apply the proposed mixture model to DNase-seq data from the ENCODE project, which results in biologically meaningful clusters corresponding to binding events of two common TFs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2509.15480,
  title  = {A tree-based kernel for densities and its applications in clustering DNase-seq profiles},
  author = {Yuliang Xu and Kaixuan Luo and Li Ma},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.15480},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:44:55.152Z