| Literature DB >> 36215333 |
Breschine Cummins1, Francis C Motta2, Robert C Moseley3, Anastasia Deckard4, Sophia Campione3, Marcio Gameiro5,6, Tomáš Gedeon1, Konstantin Mischaikow5, Steven B Haase3.
Abstract
Large programs of dynamic gene expression, like cell cyles and circadian rhythms, are controlled by a relatively small "core" network of transcription factors and post-translational modifiers, working in concerted mutual regulation. Recent work suggests that system-independent, quantitative features of the dynamics of gene expression can be used to identify core regulators. We introduce an approach of iterative network hypothesis reduction from time-series data in which increasingly complex features of the dynamic expression of individual, pairs, and entire collections of genes are used to infer functional network models that can produce the observed transcriptional program. The culmination of our work is a computational pipeline, Iterative Network Hypothesis Reduction from Temporal Dynamics (Inherent dynamics pipeline), that provides a priority listing of targets for genetic perturbation to experimentally infer network structure. We demonstrate the capability of this integrated computational pipeline on synthetic and yeast cell-cycle data.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36215333 PMCID: PMC9584434 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.779