88,371 research outputs found
Topological network alignment uncovers biological function and phylogeny
Sequence comparison and alignment has had an enormous impact on our
understanding of evolution, biology, and disease. Comparison and alignment of
biological networks will likely have a similar impact. Existing network
alignments use information external to the networks, such as sequence, because
no good algorithm for purely topological alignment has yet been devised. In
this paper, we present a novel algorithm based solely on network topology, that
can be used to align any two networks. We apply it to biological networks to
produce by far the most complete topological alignments of biological networks
to date. We demonstrate that both species phylogeny and detailed biological
function of individual proteins can be extracted from our alignments.
Topology-based alignments have the potential to provide a completely new,
independent source of phylogenetic information. Our alignment of the
protein-protein interaction networks of two very different species--yeast and
human--indicate that even distant species share a surprising amount of network
topology with each other, suggesting broad similarities in internal cellular
wiring across all life on Earth.Comment: Algorithm explained in more details. Additional analysis adde
Data-driven network alignment
Biological network alignment (NA) aims to find a node mapping between
species' molecular networks that uncovers similar network regions, thus
allowing for transfer of functional knowledge between the aligned nodes.
However, current NA methods do not end up aligning functionally related nodes.
A likely reason is that they assume it is topologically similar nodes that are
functionally related. However, we show that this assumption does not hold well.
So, a paradigm shift is needed with how the NA problem is approached. We
redefine NA as a data-driven framework, TARA (daTA-dRiven network Alignment),
which attempts to learn the relationship between topological relatedness and
functional relatedness without assuming that topological relatedness
corresponds to topological similarity, like traditional NA methods do. TARA
trains a classifier to predict whether two nodes from different networks are
functionally related based on their network topological patterns. We find that
TARA is able to make accurate predictions. TARA then takes each pair of nodes
that are predicted as related to be part of an alignment. Like traditional NA
methods, TARA uses this alignment for the across-species transfer of functional
knowledge. Clearly, TARA as currently implemented uses topological but not
protein sequence information for this task. We find that TARA outperforms
existing state-of-the-art NA methods that also use topological information,
WAVE and SANA, and even outperforms or complements a state-of-the-art NA method
that uses both topological and sequence information, PrimAlign. Hence, adding
sequence information to TARA, which is our future work, is likely to further
improve its performance
The network of stabilizing contacts in proteins studied by coevolutionary data
The primary structure of proteins, that is their sequence, represents one of
the most abundant set of experimental data concerning biomolecules. The study
of correlations in families of co--evolving proteins by means of an inverse
Ising--model approach allows to obtain information on their native
conformation. Following up on a recent development along this line, we optimize
the algorithm to calculate effective energies between the residues, validating
the approach both back-calculating interaction energies in a model system, and
predicting the free energies associated to mutations in real systems. Making
use of these effective energies, we study the networks of interactions which
stabilizes the native conformation of some well--studied proteins, showing that
it display different properties than the associated contact network
An Introductory Guide to Aligning Networks Using SANA, the Simulated Annealing Network Aligner.
Sequence alignment has had an enormous impact on our understanding of biology, evolution, and disease. The alignment of biological networks holds similar promise. Biological networks generally model interactions between biomolecules such as proteins, genes, metabolites, or mRNAs. There is strong evidence that the network topology-the "structure" of the network-is correlated with the functions performed, so that network topology can be used to help predict or understand function. However, unlike sequence comparison and alignment-which is an essentially solved problem-network comparison and alignment is an NP-complete problem for which heuristic algorithms must be used.Here we introduce SANA, the Simulated Annealing Network Aligner. SANA is one of many algorithms proposed for the arena of biological network alignment. In the context of global network alignment, SANA stands out for its speed, memory efficiency, ease-of-use, and flexibility in the arena of producing alignments between two or more networks. SANA produces better alignments in minutes on a laptop than most other algorithms can produce in hours or days of CPU time on large server-class machines. We walk the user through how to use SANA for several types of biomolecular networks
Global Network Alignment
Motivation: High-throughput methods for detecting molecular interactions have lead to a plethora of biological network data with much more yet to come, stimulating the development of techniques for biological network alignment. Analogous to sequence alignment, efficient and reliable network alignment methods will improve our understanding of biological systems. Network alignment is computationally hard. Hence, devising efficient network alignment heuristics is currently one of the foremost challenges in computational biology. 

Results: We present a superior heuristic network alignment algorithm, called Matching-based GRAph ALigner (M-GRAAL), which can process and integrate any number and type of similarity measures between network nodes (e.g., proteins), including, but not limited to, any topological network similarity measure, sequence similarity, functional similarity, and structural similarity. This is efficient in resolving ties in similarity measures and in finding a combination of similarity measures yielding the largest biologically sound alignments. When used to align protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks of various species, M-GRAAL exposes the largest known functional and contiguous regions of network similarity. Hence, we use M-GRAAL’s alignments to predict functions of un-annotated proteins in yeast, human, and bacteria _C. jejuni_ and _E. coli_. Furthermore, using M-GRAAL to compare PPI networks of different herpes viruses, we reconstruct their phylogenetic relationship and our phylogenetic tree is the same as sequenced-based one
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