228 research outputs found

    Not All Scale-Free Networks Are Born Equal: The Role of the Seed Graph in PPI Network Evolution

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    The (asymptotic) degree distributions of the best-known ā€œscale-freeā€ network models are all similar and are independent of the seed graph used; hence, it has been tempting to assume that networks generated by these models are generally similar. In this paper, we observe that several key topological features of such networks depend heavily on the specific model and the seed graph used. Furthermore, we show that starting with the ā€œrightā€ seed graph (typically a dense subgraph of the proteinā€“protein interaction network analyzed), the duplication model captures many topological features of publicly available proteinā€“protein interaction networks very well

    Optimal Network Alignment with Graphlet Degree Vectors

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    Important biological information is encoded in the topology of biological networks. Comparative analyses of biological networks are proving to be valuable, as they can lead to transfer of knowledge between species and give deeper insights into biological function, disease, and evolution. We introduce a new method that uses the Hungarian algorithm to produce optimal global alignment between two networks using any cost function. We design a cost function based solely on network topology and use it in our network alignment. Our method can be applied to any two networks, not just biological ones, since it is based only on network topology. We use our new method to align protein-protein interaction networks of two eukaryotic species and demonstrate that our alignment exposes large and topologically complex regions of network similarity. At the same time, our alignment is biologically valid, since many of the aligned protein pairs perform the same biological function. From the alignment, we predict function of yet unannotated proteins, many of which we validate in the literature. Also, we apply our method to find topological similarities between metabolic networks of different species and build phylogenetic trees based on our network alignment score. The phylogenetic trees obtained in this way bear a striking resemblance to the ones obtained by sequence alignments. Our method detects topologically similar regions in large networks that are statistically significant. It does this independent of protein sequence or any other information external to network topology

    Not All Scale-Free Networks Are Born Equal: The Role of the Seed Graph in PPI Network Evolution

    Get PDF
    The (asymptotic) degree distributions of the best-known ā€œscale-freeā€ network models are all similar and are independent of the seed graph used; hence, it has been tempting to assume that networks generated by these models are generally similar. In this paper, we observe that several key topological features of such networks depend heavily on the specific model and the seed graph used. Furthermore, we show that starting with the ā€œrightā€ seed graph (typically a dense subgraph of the proteinā€“protein interaction network analyzed), the duplication model captures many topological features of publicly available proteinā€“protein interaction networks very well
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