Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Research in Computational Molecular Biology: 11th Annual International Conference, RECOMB 2007, Oakland, CA, USA, April 21-25, 2007. Proceedings
Terry Speed ; Haiyan Huang (eds.)
En conferencia: 11º Annual International Conference on Research in Computational Molecular Biology (RECOMB) . Oakland, CA, USA . April 21, 2007 - April 25, 2007
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Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-71680-8
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-71681-5
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
QNet: A Tool for Querying Protein Interaction Networks
Banu Dost; Tomer Shlomi; Nitin Gupta; Eytan Ruppin; Vineet Bafna; Roded Sharan
Molecular interaction databases can be used to study the evolution of molecular pathways across species. Querying such pathways is a challenging computational problem, and recent efforts have been limited to simple queries (paths), or simple networks (forests). In this paper, we significantly extend the class of pathways that can be efficiently queried to the case of trees, and graphs of bounded treewidth. Our algorithm allows the identification of non-exact (homeomorphic) matches, exploiting the color coding technique of Alon et al. We implement a tool for tree queries, called QNet, and test its retrieval properties in simulations and on real network data. We show that QNet searches queries with up to 9 proteins in seconds on current networks, and outperforms sequence-based searches. We also use QNet to perform the first large scale cross-species comparison of protein complexes, by querying known yeast complexes against a fly protein interaction network. This comparison points to strong conservation between the two species, and underscores the importance of our tool in mining protein interaction networks.
Pp. 1-15
Pairwise Global Alignment of Protein Interaction Networks by Matching Neighborhood Topology
Rohit Singh; Jinbo Xu; Bonnie Berger
We describe an algorithm, , for global alignment of two protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks. aims to maximize the overall match between the two networks; in contrast, much of previous work has focused on the local alignment problem— identifying many possible alignments, each corresponding to a local region of similarity. is guided by the intuition that a protein should be matched with a protein in the other network if and only if the neighbors of the two proteins can also be well matched. We encode this intuition as an eigenvalue problem, in a manner analogous to Google’s PageRank method. We use to compute the first known global alignment between the and PPI networks. The common subgraph has 1420 edges and describes conserved functional components between the two species. Comparisons of our results with those of a well-known algorithm for local network alignment indicate that the globally optimized alignment resolves ambiguity introduced by multiple local alignments. Finally, we interpret the results of global alignment to identify functional orthologs between yeast and fly; our functional ortholog prediction method is much simpler than a recently proposed approach and yet provides results that are more comprehensive.
Pp. 16-31
Reconstructing the Topology of Protein Complexes
Allister Bernard; David S. Vaughn; Alexander J. Hartemink
Recent advances in high-throughput experimental techniques have enabled the production of a wealth of protein interaction data, rich in both quantity and variety. While the sheer quantity and variety of data present special difficulties for modeling, they also present unique opportunities for gaining insight into protein behavior by leveraging multiple perspectives. Recent work on the modularity of protein interactions has revealed that reasoning about protein interactions at the level of domain interactions can be quite useful. We present , a learning algorithm for reconstructing the internal topology of protein complexes by reasoning at the domain level about both direct protein interaction data (Y2H) and protein co-complex data (AP-MS). While other methods have attempted to use data from both these kinds of assays, they usually require that co-complex data be transformed into pairwise interaction data under a spoke or clique model, a transformation we do not require. We apply to data from eight high-throughput datasets, encompassing 5,925 proteins, essentially all of the yeast proteome. First we show that outperforms other algorithms for predicting domain-domain and protein-protein interactions from Y2H and AP-MS data. Then we show that our algorithm can reconstruct the internal topology of AP-MS purifications, revealing known complexes like Arp2/3 and RNA polymerase II, as well as suggesting new complexes along with their corresponding topologies.
Pp. 32-46
Network Legos: Building Blocks of Cellular Wiring Diagrams
T. M. Murali; Corban G. Rivera
Publicly-available data sets provide detailed and large-scale information on multiple types of molecular interaction networks in a number of model organisms. These multi-modal universal networks capture a static view of cellular state. An important challenge in systems biology is obtaining a dynamic perspective on these networks by integrating them with gene expression measurements taken under multiple conditions.
We present a top-down computational approach to identify building blocks of molecular interaction networks by
We propose efficient methods to compute active networks, systematically mine candidate legos, assess the statistical significance of these candidates, arrange them in a directed acyclic graph (DAG), and exploit the structure of the DAG to identify true network legos. We describe methods to assess the stability of our computations to changes in the input and to recover active networks by composing network legos.
We analyse two human datasets using our method. A comparison of three leukaemias demonstrates how a biologist can use our system to identify specific differences between these diseases. A larger-scale analysis of 13 distinct stresses illustrates our ability to compute the building blocks of the interaction networks activated in response to these stresses.
Pp. 47-61
An Efficient Method for Dynamic Analysis of Gene Regulatory Networks and Gene Perturbation Experiments
Abhishek Garg; Ioannis Xenarios; Luis Mendoza; Giovanni DeMicheli
With the increasing availability of experimental data on gene-gene and protein-protein interactions, modeling of gene regulatory networks has gained a special attention lately. To have a better understanding of these networks it is necessary to capture their dynamical properties, by computing its steady states. Various methods have been proposed to compute steady states but almost all of them suffer from the state space explosion problem with the increasing size of the networks. Hence it becomes difficult to model even moderate sized networks using these techniques. In this paper, we present a new representation of gene regulatory networks, which facilitates the steady state computation of networks as large as 1200 nodes and 5000 edges. We benchmarked and validated our algorithm on the T helper model from [8] and performed knock out experiments: showing both a reduction in computation time and correct steady state identification.
Pp. 62-76
A Feature-Based Approach to Modeling Protein-DNA Interactions
Eilon Sharon; Eran Segal
Transcription factor (TF) binding to its DNA target site is a fundamental regulatory interaction. The most common model used to represent TF binding specificities is a (PSSM), which assumes independence between binding positions. In many cases this simplifying assumption does not hold. Here, we present (FMMs), a novel probabilistic method for modeling TF-DNA interactions, based on . Our approach uses sequence to represent TF binding specificities, where each feature may span multiple positions. We develop the mathematical formulation of our models, and devise an algorithm for learning their structural features from binding site data. We evaluate our approach on synthetic data, and then apply it to binding site and ChIP-chip data from yeast. We reveal sequence features that are present in the binding specificities of yeast TFs, and show that FMMs explain the binding data significantly better than PSSMs.
Pp. 77-91
Network Motif Discovery Using Subgraph Enumeration and Symmetry-Breaking
Joshua A. Grochow; Manolis Kellis
The study of biological networks and network motifs can yield significant new insights into systems biology. Previous methods of discovering network motifs – network-centric subgraph enumeration and sampling – have been limited to motifs of 6 to 8 nodes, revealing only the smallest network components. New methods are necessary to identify larger network sub-structures and functional motifs.
Here we present a novel algorithm for discovering large network motifs that achieves these goals, based on a novel symmetry-breaking technique, which eliminates repeated isomorphism testing, leading to an exponential speed-up over previous methods. This technique is made possible by reversing the traditional network-based search at the heart of the algorithm to a motif-based search, which also eliminates the need to store all motifs of a given size and enables parallelization and scaling. Additionally, our method enables us to study the clustering properties of discovered motifs, revealing even larger network elements.
We apply this algorithm to the protein-protein interaction network and transcription regulatory network of , and discover several large network motifs, which were previously inaccessible to existing methods, including a 29-node cluster of 15-node motifs corresponding to the key transcription machinery of .
Pp. 92-106
Nucleosome Occupancy Information Improves Motif Discovery
Leelavati Narlikar; Raluca Gordân; Alexander J. Hartemink
A complete understanding of transcriptional regulatory processes in the cell requires identification of transcription factor binding sites on a genome-wide scale. Unfortunately, these binding sites are typically short and degenerate, posing a significant statistical challenge: many more matches to known transcription factor binding sites occur in the genome than are actually functional. Chromatin structure is known to play an important role in guiding transcription factors to those sites that are functional. In particular, it has been shown that active regulatory regions are usually depleted of nucleosomes, thereby enabling transcription factors to bind DNA in those regions [1]. In this paper, we describe a novel algorithm which employs an informative prior over DNA sequence positions based on a discriminative view of nucleosome occupancy; the nucleosome occupancy information comes from a recently published computational model [2]. When a Gibbs sampling algorithm with our informative prior is applied to yeast sequence-sets identified by ChIP-chip [3], the correct motif is found in 50% more cases than with an uninformative uniform prior. Moreover, if nucleosome occupancy information is not available, our informative prior reduces to a new kind of prior that can exploit discriminative information in a purely generative setting.
Pp. 107-121
Framework for Identifying Common Aberrations in DNA Copy Number Data
Amir Ben-Dor; Doron Lipson; Anya Tsalenko; Mark Reimers; Lars O. Baumbusch; Michael T. Barrett; John N. Weinstein; Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale; Zohar Yakhini
High-resolution array comparative genomic hybridization(aCGH) provides exon-level mapping of DNA aberrations in cells or tissues. Such aberrations are central to carcinogenesis and, in many cases, central to targeted therapy of the cancers. Some of the aberrations are sporadic, one-of-a-kind changes in particular tumor samples; others occur frequently and reflect common themes in cancer biology that have interpretable, causal ramifications. Hence, the difficult task of identifying and mapping common, overlapping genomic aberrations (including amplifications and deletions) across a sample set is an important one; it can provide insight for the discovery of oncogenes, tumor suppressors, and the mechanisms by which they drive cancer development.
In this paper we present an efficient computational framework for identification and statistical characterization of genomic aberrations that are common to multiple cancer samples in a CGH data set. We present and compare three different algorithmic approaches within the context of that framework. Finally, we apply our methods to two datasets – a collection of 20 breast cancer samples and a panel of 60 diverse human tumor cell lines (the NCI-60). Those analyses identified both known and novel common aberrations containing cancer-related genes. The potential impact of the analytical methods is well demonstrated by new insights into the patterns of deletion of CDKN2A (p16), a tumor suppressor gene crucial for the genesis of many types of cancer.
Pp. 122-136
Estimating Genome-Wide Copy Number Using Allele Specific Mixture Models
Wenyi Wang; Benilton Carvalho; Nate Miller; Jonathan Pevsner; Aravinda Chakravarti; Rafael A. Irizarry
Genomic changes such as copy number alterations are thought to be one of the major underlying causes of human phenotypic variation among normal and disease subjects [23,11,25,26,5,4,7,18]. These include chromosomal regions with so-called copy number alterations: instead of the expected two copies, a section of the chromosome for a particular individual may have zero copies (homozygous deletion), one copy (hemizygous deletions), or more than two copies (amplifications). The canonical example is Down syndrome which is caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21. Identification of such abnormalities in smaller regions has been of great interest, because it is believed to be an underlying cause of cancer.
More than one decade ago comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) technology was developed to detect copy number changes in a high- throughput fashion. However, this technology only provides a 10 MB resolution which limits the ability to detect copy number alterations spanning small regions. It is widely believed that a copy number alteration as small as one base can have significant downstream effects, thus microarray manufacturers have developed technologies that provide much higher resolution. Unfortunately, strong probe effects and variation introduced by sample preparation procedures have made single-point copy number estimates too imprecise to be useful. CGH arrays use a two-color hybridization, usually comparing a sample of interest to a reference sample, which to some degree removes the probe effect. However, the resolution is not nearly high enough to provide single-point copy number estimates.
Various groups have proposed statistical procedures that pool data from neighboring locations to successfully improve precision. However, these procedure need to average across relatively large regions to work effectively thus greatly reducing the resolution. Recently, regression-type models that account for probe-effect have been proposed and appear to improve accuracy as well as precision. In this paper, we propose a mixture model solution specifically designed for single-point estimation, that provides various advantages over the existing methodology. We use a 314 sample database, constructed with public datasets, to motivate and fit models for the conditional distribution of the observed intensities given allele specific copy numbers. With the estimated models in place we can compute posterior probabilities that provide a useful prediction rule as well as a confidence measure for each call. Software to implement this procedure will be available in the Bioconductor package (http://www.bioconductor.org).
Pp. 137-150