5,288 research outputs found

    Inferring a Transcriptional Regulatory Network from Gene Expression Data Using Nonlinear Manifold Embedding

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    Transcriptional networks consist of multiple regulatory layers corresponding to the activity of global regulators, specialized repressors and activators of transcription as well as proteins and enzymes shaping the DNA template. Such intrinsic multi-dimensionality makes uncovering connectivity patterns difficult and unreliable and it calls for adoption of methodologies commensurate with the underlying organization of the data source. Here we present a new computational method that predicts interactions between transcription factors and target genes using a compendium of microarray gene expression data and the knowledge of known interactions between genes and transcription factors. The proposed method called Kernel Embedding of REgulatory Networks (KEREN) is based on the concept of gene-regulon association and it captures hidden geometric patterns of the network via manifold embedding. We applied KEREN to reconstruct gene regulatory interactions in the model bacteria E.coli on a genome-wide scale. Our method not only yields accurate prediction of verifiable interactions, which outperforms on certain metrics comparable methodologies, but also demonstrates the utility of a geometric approach to the analysis of high-dimensional biological data. We also describe the general application of kernel embedding techniques to some other function and network discovery algorithms

    Reverse Engineering Gene Networks with ANN: Variability in Network Inference Algorithms

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    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
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