5,012 research outputs found
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
Reverse engineering of genetic networks with Bayesian networks
This paper provides a brief introduction to learning Bayesian networks from gene-expression data. The method is contrasted with other approaches to the reverse engineering of biochemical networks, and the Bayesian learning paradigm is briefly described. The article demonstrates an application to a simple synthetic toy problem and evaluates the inference performance in terms of ROC (receiver operator characteristic) curves
Application of new probabilistic graphical models in the genetic regulatory networks studies
This paper introduces two new probabilistic graphical models for
reconstruction of genetic regulatory networks using DNA microarray data. One is
an Independence Graph (IG) model with either a forward or a backward search
algorithm and the other one is a Gaussian Network (GN) model with a novel
greedy search method. The performances of both models were evaluated on four
MAPK pathways in yeast and three simulated data sets. Generally, an IG model
provides a sparse graph but a GN model produces a dense graph where more
information about gene-gene interactions is preserved. Additionally, we found
two key limitations in the prediction of genetic regulatory networks using DNA
microarray data, the first is the sufficiency of sample size and the second is
the complexity of network structures may not be captured without additional
data at the protein level. Those limitations are present in all prediction
methods which used only DNA microarray data.Comment: 38 pages, 3 figure
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