18,956 research outputs found
A Posterior Probability Approach for Gene Regulatory Network Inference in Genetic Perturbation Data
Inferring gene regulatory networks is an important problem in systems
biology. However, these networks can be hard to infer from experimental data
because of the inherent variability in biological data as well as the large
number of genes involved. We propose a fast, simple method for inferring
regulatory relationships between genes from knockdown experiments in the NIH
LINCS dataset by calculating posterior probabilities, incorporating prior
information. We show that the method is able to find previously identified
edges from TRANSFAC and JASPAR and discuss the merits and limitations of this
approach
How to understand the cell by breaking it: network analysis of gene perturbation screens
Modern high-throughput gene perturbation screens are key technologies at the
forefront of genetic research. Combined with rich phenotypic descriptors they
enable researchers to observe detailed cellular reactions to experimental
perturbations on a genome-wide scale. This review surveys the current
state-of-the-art in analyzing perturbation screens from a network point of
view. We describe approaches to make the step from the parts list to the wiring
diagram by using phenotypes for network inference and integrating them with
complementary data sources. The first part of the review describes methods to
analyze one- or low-dimensional phenotypes like viability or reporter activity;
the second part concentrates on high-dimensional phenotypes showing global
changes in cell morphology, transcriptome or proteome.Comment: Review based on ISMB 2009 tutorial; after two rounds of revisio
Combining Bayesian Approaches and Evolutionary Techniques for the Inference of Breast Cancer Networks
Gene and protein networks are very important to model complex large-scale
systems in molecular biology. Inferring or reverseengineering such networks can
be defined as the process of identifying gene/protein interactions from
experimental data through computational analysis. However, this task is
typically complicated by the enormously large scale of the unknowns in a rather
small sample size. Furthermore, when the goal is to study causal relationships
within the network, tools capable of overcoming the limitations of correlation
networks are required. In this work, we make use of Bayesian Graphical Models
to attach this problem and, specifically, we perform a comparative study of
different state-of-the-art heuristics, analyzing their performance in inferring
the structure of the Bayesian Network from breast cancer data
Weighted-Lasso for Structured Network Inference from Time Course Data
We present a weighted-Lasso method to infer the parameters of a first-order
vector auto-regressive model that describes time course expression data
generated by directed gene-to-gene regulation networks. These networks are
assumed to own a prior internal structure of connectivity which drives the
inference method. This prior structure can be either derived from prior
biological knowledge or inferred by the method itself. We illustrate the
performance of this structure-based penalization both on synthetic data and on
two canonical regulatory networks, first yeast cell cycle regulation network by
analyzing Spellman et al's dataset and second E. coli S.O.S. DNA repair network
by analysing U. Alon's lab data
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