344 research outputs found

    The potential of text mining in data integration and network biology for plant research : a case study on Arabidopsis

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    Despite the availability of various data repositories for plant research, a wealth of information currently remains hidden within the biomolecular literature. Text mining provides the necessary means to retrieve these data through automated processing of texts. However, only recently has advanced text mining methodology been implemented with sufficient computational power to process texts at a large scale. In this study, we assess the potential of large-scale text mining for plant biology research in general and for network biology in particular using a state-of-the-art text mining system applied to all PubMed abstracts and PubMed Central full texts. We present extensive evaluation of the textual data for Arabidopsis thaliana, assessing the overall accuracy of this new resource for usage in plant network analyses. Furthermore, we combine text mining information with both protein-protein and regulatory interactions from experimental databases. Clusters of tightly connected genes are delineated from the resulting network, illustrating how such an integrative approach is essential to grasp the current knowledge available for Arabidopsis and to uncover gene information through guilt by association. All large-scale data sets, as well as the manually curated textual data, are made publicly available, hereby stimulating the application of text mining data in future plant biology studies

    TOSNet : a topic-based optimal subnetwork identification in academic networks

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    Subnetwork identification plays a significant role in analyzing, managing, and comprehending the structure and functions in big networks. Numerous approaches have been proposed to solve the problem of subnetwork identification as well as community detection. Most of the methods focus on detecting communities by considering node attributes, edge information, or both. This study focuses on discovering subnetworks containing researchers with similar or related areas of interest or research topics. A topic- aware subnetwork identification is essential to discover potential researchers on particular research topics and provide qualitywork. Thus, we propose a topic-based optimal subnetwork identification approach (TOSNet). Based on some fundamental characteristics, this paper addresses the following problems: 1)How to discover topic-based subnetworks with a vigorous collaboration intensity? 2) How to rank the discovered subnetworks and single out one optimal subnetwork? We evaluate the performance of the proposed method against baseline methods by adopting the modularity measure, assess the accuracy based on the size of the identified subnetworks, and check the scalability for different sizes of benchmark networks. The experimental findings indicate that our approach shows excellent performance in identifying contextual subnetworks that maintain intensive collaboration amongst researchers for a particular research topic. © 2020 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.. All rights reserved

    Computational analysis of protein interaction networks for infectious diseases

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    Infectious diseases caused by pathogens, including viruses, bacteria and parasites, pose a serious threat to human health worldwide. Frequent changes in the pattern of infection mechanisms and the emergence of multidrug resistant strains among pathogens have weakened the current treatment regimen. This necessitates the development of new therapeutic interventions to prevent and control such diseases. To cater to the need, analysis of protein interaction networks (PINs) has gained importance as one of the promising strategies. The present review aims to discuss various computational approaches to analyse the PINs in context to infectious diseases. Topology and modularity analysis of the network with their biological relevance, and the scenario till date about host-pathogen and intra-pathogenic protein interaction studies were delineated. This would provide useful insights to the research community thereby enabling them to design novel biomedicine against such infectious diseases

    Data mining and predictive modeling of biomolecular network from biomedical literature databases

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    IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, 4(2): pp. 251-263 .In this paper, we present a novel approach Bio-IEDM (Biomedical Information Extraction and Data Mining) to integrate text mining and predictive modeling to analyze biomolecular network from biomedical literature databases. Our method consists of two phases. In phase 1, we discuss a semisupervised efficient learning approach to automatically extract biological relationships such as protein-protein interaction, protein-gene interaction from the biomedical literature databases to construct the biomolecular network. Our method automatically learns the patterns based on a few user seed tuples and then extracts new tuples from the biomedical literature based on the discovered patterns. The derived biomolecular network forms a large scale-free network graph. In phase 2, we present a novel clustering algorithm to analyze the biomolecular network graph to identify biologically meaningful subnetworks (communities). The clustering algorithm considers the characteristics of the scale-free network graphs and is based on the local density of the vertex and its neighborhood functions that can be used to find more meaningful clusters with different density level. The experimental results indicate our approach is very effective in extracting biological knowledge from a huge collection of biomedical literature. The integration of data mining and information extraction provides a promising direction for analyzing the biomolecular network

    Computational Labeling, Partitioning, and Balancing of Molecular Networks

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    Recent advances in high throughput techniques enable large-scale molecular quantification with high accuracy, including mRNAs, proteins and metabolites. Differential expression of these molecules in case and control samples provides a way to select phenotype-associated molecules with statistically significant changes. However, given the significance ranking list of molecular changes, how those molecules work together to drive phenotype formation is still unclear. In particular, the changes in molecular quantities are insufficient to interpret the changes in their functional behavior. My study is aimed at answering this question by integrating molecular network data to systematically model and estimate the changes of molecular functional behaviors. We build three computational models to label, partition, and balance molecular networks using modern machine learning techniques. (1) Due to the incompleteness of protein functional annotation, we develop AptRank, an adaptive PageRank model for protein function prediction on bilayer networks. By integrating Gene Ontology (GO) hierarchy with protein-protein interaction network, our AptRank outperforms four state-of-the-art methods in a comprehensive evaluation using benchmark datasets. (2) We next extend our AptRank into a network partitioning method, BioSweeper, to identify functional network modules in which molecules share similar functions and also densely connect to each other. Compared to traditional network partitioning methods using only network connections, BioSweeper, which integrates the GO hierarchy, can automatically identify functionally enriched network modules. (3) Finally, we conduct a differential interaction analysis, namely difFBA, on protein-protein interaction networks by simulating protein fluxes using flux balance analysis (FBA). We test difFBA using quantitative proteomic data from colon cancer, and demonstrate that difFBA offers more insights into functional changes in molecular behavior than does protein quantity changes alone. We conclude that our integrative network model increases the observational dimensions of complex biological systems, and enables us to more deeply understand the causal relationships between genotypes and phenotypes

    Efficiency of the immunome protein interaction network increases during evolution

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    Details of the mechanisms and selection pressures that shape the emergence and development of complex biological systems, such as the human immune system, are poorly understood. A recent definition of a reference set of proteins essential for the human immunome, combined with information about protein interaction networks for these proteins, facilitates evolutionary study of this biological machinery

    Data integration, pathway analysis and mining for systems biology

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    Post-genomic molecular biology embodies high-throughput experimental techniques and hence is a data-rich field. The goal of this thesis is to develop bioinformatics methods to utilise publicly available data in order to produce knowledge and to aid mining of newly generated data. As an example of knowledge or hypothesis generation, consider function prediction of biological molecules. Assignment of protein function is a non-trivial task owing to the fact that the same protein may be involved in different biological processes, depending on the state of the biological system and protein localisation. The function of a gene or a gene product may be provided as a textual description in a gene or protein annotation database. Such textual descriptions lack in providing the contextual meaning of the gene function. Therefore, we need ways to represent the meaning in a formal way. Here we apply data integration approach to provide rich representation that enables context-sensitive mining of biological data in terms of integrated networks and conceptual spaces. Context-sensitive gene function annotation follows naturally from this framework, as a particular application. Next, knowledge that is already publicly available can be used to aid mining of new experimental data. We developed an integrative bioinformatics method that utilises publicly available knowledge of protein-protein interactions, metabolic networks and transcriptional regulatory networks to analyse transcriptomics data and predict altered biological processes. We applied this method to a study of dynamic response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to oxidative stress. The application of our method revealed dynamically altered biological functions in response to oxidative stress, which were validated by comprehensive in vivo metabolomics experiments. The results provided in this thesis indicate that integration of heterogeneous biological data facilitates advanced mining of the data. The methods can be applied for gaining insight into functions of genes, gene products and other molecules, as well as for offering functional interpretation to transcriptomics and metabolomics experiments
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