| Literature DB >> 17317333 |
Xin Li1, Hsinchun Chen, Zan Huang, Hua Su, Jesse D Martinez.
Abstract
Gene/protein interactions provide critical information for a thorough understanding of cellular processes. Recently, considerable interest and effort has been focused on the construction and analysis of genome-wide gene networks. The large body of biomedical literature is an important source of gene/protein interaction information. Recent advances in text mining tools have made it possible to automatically extract such documented interactions from free-text literature. In this paper, we propose a comprehensive framework for constructing and analyzing large-scale gene functional networks based on the gene/protein interactions extracted from biomedical literature repositories using text mining tools. Our proposed framework consists of analyses of the network topology, network topology-gene function relationship, and temporal network evolution to distill valuable information embedded in the gene functional interactions in the literature. We demonstrate the application of the proposed framework using a testbed of P53-related PubMed abstracts, which shows that the literature-based P53 networks exhibit small-world and scale-free properties. We also found that high degree genes in the literature-based networks have a high probability of appearing in the manually curated database and genes in the same pathway tend to form local clusters in our literature-based networks. Temporal analysis showed that genes interacting with many other genes tend to be involved in a large number of newly discovered interactions.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17317333 PMCID: PMC2047827 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2007.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Inform ISSN: 1532-0464 Impact factor: 6.317