Kirjasto - Tampereen teknillinen yliopisto

Information propagation within the genetic network of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Show full item record

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
chowdhury_infor ... ion_within_the_genetic.pdf 305.2Kb PDF View/Open
URN: http://URN.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tty-201104151600
Title: Information propagation within the genetic network of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Author: Chowdhury, Sharif; Lloyd-Price, Jason; Smolander, Olli-Pekka; Baici, Wayne C. V.; Hughes, Timothy R.; Yli-Harja, Olli; Chua, Gordon; S. Ribeiro, Andre
Publication type: Artikkeli - Article
Issue date: 2010
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-4-143
Description: Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
University: Tampereen teknillinen yliopisto - Tampere University of Technology
Faculty: Tieto- ja sähkötekniikan tiedekunta – Faculty of Computing and Electrical Engineering
Department: Signaalinkäsittelyn laitos
Abstract: Background

A gene network's capacity to process information, so as to bind past events to future actions, depends on its structure and logic. From previous and new microarray measurements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae following gene deletions and overexpressions, we identify a core gene regulatory network (GRN) of functional interactions between 328 genes and the transfer functions of each gene. Inferred connections are verified by gene enrichment.

Results

We find that this core network has a generalized clustering coefficient that is much higher than chance. The inferred Boolean transfer functions have a mean p-bias of 0.41, and thus similar amounts of activation and repression interactions. However, the distribution of p-biases differs significantly from what is expected by chance that, along with the high mean connectivity, is found to cause the core GRN of S. cerevisiae's to have an overall sensitivity similar to critical Boolean networks. In agreement, we find that the amount of information propagated between nodes in finite time series is much higher in the inferred core GRN of S. cerevisiae than what is expected by chance.

Conclusions

We suggest that S. cerevisiae is likely to have evolved a core GRN with enhanced information propagation among its genes.

Copyright: This publication is copyrighted. You may download, display and print it for Your own personal use. Commercial use is prohibited.


This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search TUT DPub


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Statistics