| Literature DB >> 24995123 |
Xiaodan Wu1, Luonan Chen2, Xiangdong Wang3.
Abstract
Identification and validation of interaction networks and network biomarkers have become more critical and important in the development of disease-specific biomarkers, which are functionally changed during disease development, progression or treatment. The present review headlined the definition, significance, research and potential application for network biomarkers, interaction networks and dynamical network biomarkers (DNB). Disease-specific interaction networks, network biomarkers, or DNB have great significance in the understanding of molecular pathogenesis, risk assessment, disease classification and monitoring, or evaluations of therapeutic responses and toxicities. Protein-based DNB will provide more information to define the differences between the normal and pre-disease stages, which might point to early diagnosis for patients. Clinical bioinformatics should be a key approach to the identification and validation of disease-specific biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Dynamic network biomarkers; Lung cancer; Network biomarkers; Prognosis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24995123 PMCID: PMC4072888 DOI: 10.1186/2001-1326-3-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Figure 1Biomarkers, network biomarkers and dynamical network biomarkers. Biomarkers provide one dimensional information, while network biomarkers provide two dimensional information by adding interactions. DNBs provide a three dimensional image of biomarker-biomarker interactions by showing time-dependent stronger or weaker interactions among biomarkers in the network. DNB: Dynamical network biomarkers.
Figure 2Disease states and biomarkers. There are three stages during disease progression, i.e., a normal state, a pre-disease state and a disease state. A normal state is a relatively healthy stage including the chronic inflammation period or the stable period during which the disease is under control, whereas a pre-disease state is the limit of the normal state just before the critical transition into the disease state. And there are three types of biomarkers, i.e., traditional molecular biomarkers, network biomarkers, and newly developed dynamical network biomarkers (DNB). Both molecular and network biomarkers are static measurements on the disease and indicators on the disease state, whereas DNB are dynamical measurements on the pre-disease, thus providing the early-warning signals for the pre-disease state.