16,126 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
Inferring causal relations from multivariate time series : a fast method for large-scale gene expression data
Various multivariate time series analysis techniques have been developed with the aim of inferring causal relations between time series. Previously, these techniques have proved their effectiveness on economic and neurophysiological data, which normally consist of hundreds of samples. However, in their applications to gene regulatory inference, the small sample size of gene expression time series poses an obstacle. In this paper, we describe some of the most commonly used multivariate inference techniques and show the potential challenge related to gene expression analysis. In response, we propose a directed partial correlation (DPC) algorithm as an efficient and effective solution to causal/regulatory relations inference on small sample gene expression data. Comparative evaluations on the existing techniques and the proposed method are presented. To draw reliable conclusions, a comprehensive benchmarking on data sets of various setups is essential. Three experiments are designed to assess these methods in a coherent manner. Detailed analysis of experimental results not only reveals good accuracy of the proposed DPC method in large-scale prediction, but also gives much insight into all methods under evaluation
Bayesian variable selection and data integration for biological regulatory networks
A substantial focus of research in molecular biology are gene regulatory
networks: the set of transcription factors and target genes which control the
involvement of different biological processes in living cells. Previous
statistical approaches for identifying gene regulatory networks have used gene
expression data, ChIP binding data or promoter sequence data, but each of these
resources provides only partial information. We present a Bayesian hierarchical
model that integrates all three data types in a principled variable selection
framework. The gene expression data are modeled as a function of the unknown
gene regulatory network which has an informed prior distribution based upon
both ChIP binding and promoter sequence data. We also present a variable
weighting methodology for the principled balancing of multiple sources of prior
information. We apply our procedure to the discovery of gene regulatory
relationships in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Yeast) for which we can use several
external sources of information to validate our results. Our inferred
relationships show greater biological relevance on the external validation
measures than previous data integration methods. Our model also estimates
synergistic and antagonistic interactions between transcription factors, many
of which are validated by previous studies. We also evaluate the results from
our procedure for the weighting for multiple sources of prior information.
Finally, we discuss our methodology in the context of previous approaches to
data integration and Bayesian variable selection.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-AOAS130 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Reverse Engineering Gene Networks with ANN: Variability in Network Inference Algorithms
Motivation :Reconstructing the topology of a gene regulatory network is one
of the key tasks in systems biology. Despite of the wide variety of proposed
methods, very little work has been dedicated to the assessment of their
stability properties. Here we present a methodical comparison of the
performance of a novel method (RegnANN) for gene network inference based on
multilayer perceptrons with three reference algorithms (ARACNE, CLR, KELLER),
focussing our analysis on the prediction variability induced by both the
network intrinsic structure and the available data.
Results: The extensive evaluation on both synthetic data and a selection of
gene modules of "Escherichia coli" indicates that all the algorithms suffer of
instability and variability issues with regards to the reconstruction of the
topology of the network. This instability makes objectively very hard the task
of establishing which method performs best. Nevertheless, RegnANN shows MCC
scores that compare very favorably with all the other inference methods tested.
Availability: The software for the RegnANN inference algorithm is distributed
under GPL3 and it is available at the corresponding author home page
(http://mpba.fbk.eu/grimaldi/regnann-supmat
Network estimation in State Space Model with L1-regularization constraint
Biological networks have arisen as an attractive paradigm of genomic science
ever since the introduction of large scale genomic technologies which carried
the promise of elucidating the relationship in functional genomics. Microarray
technologies coupled with appropriate mathematical or statistical models have
made it possible to identify dynamic regulatory networks or to measure time
course of the expression level of many genes simultaneously. However one of the
few limitations fall on the high-dimensional nature of such data coupled with
the fact that these gene expression data are known to include some hidden
process. In that regards, we are concerned with deriving a method for inferring
a sparse dynamic network in a high dimensional data setting. We assume that the
observations are noisy measurements of gene expression in the form of mRNAs,
whose dynamics can be described by some unknown or hidden process. We build an
input-dependent linear state space model from these hidden states and
demonstrate how an incorporated regularization constraint in an
Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm can be used to reverse engineer
transcriptional networks from gene expression profiling data. This corresponds
to estimating the model interaction parameters. The proposed method is
illustrated on time-course microarray data obtained from a well established
T-cell data. At the optimum tuning parameters we found genes TRAF5, JUND, CDK4,
CASP4, CD69, and C3X1 to have higher number of inwards directed connections and
FYB, CCNA2, AKT1 and CASP8 to be genes with higher number of outwards directed
connections. We recommend these genes to be object for further investigation.
Caspase 4 is also found to activate the expression of JunD which in turn
represses the cell cycle regulator CDC2.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1308.359
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