scholarly journals Independence screening for high dimensional nonlinear additive ODE models with applications to dynamic gene regulatory networks

2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (17) ◽  
pp. 2630-2644
Author(s):  
Hongqi Xue ◽  
Shuang Wu ◽  
Yichao Wu ◽  
Juan C. Ramirez Idarraga ◽  
Hulin Wu
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 1054-1059
Author(s):  
Bin Yang ◽  
Yuehui Chen

: Reconstruction of gene regulatory networks (GRN) plays an important role in understanding the complexity, functionality and pathways of biological systems, which could support the design of new drugs for diseases. Because differential equation models are flexible androbust, these models have been utilized to identify biochemical reactions and gene regulatory networks. This paper investigates the differential equation models for reverse engineering gene regulatory networks. We introduce three kinds of differential equation models, including ordinary differential equation (ODE), time-delayed differential equation (TDDE) and stochastic differential equation (SDE). ODE models include linear ODE, nonlinear ODE and S-system model. We also discuss the evolutionary algorithms, which are utilized to search the optimal structures and parameters of differential equation models. This investigation could provide a comprehensive understanding of differential equation models, and lead to the discovery of novel differential equation models.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. e0235070
Author(s):  
Xiaohan Kang ◽  
Bruce Hajek ◽  
Yoshie Hanzawa

BMC Genomics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihao Yao ◽  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Xiufen Zou

Abstract Background With the advance of high throughput sequencing, high-dimensional data are generated. Detecting dependence/correlation between these datasets is becoming one of most important issues in multi-dimensional data integration and co-expression network construction. RNA-sequencing data is widely used to construct gene regulatory networks. Such networks could be more accurate when methylation data, copy number aberration data and other types of data are introduced. Consequently, a general index for detecting relationships between high-dimensional data is indispensable. Results We proposed a Kernel-Based RV-coefficient, named KBRV, for testing both linear and nonlinear correlation between two matrices by introducing kernel functions into RV2 (the modified RV-coefficient). Permutation test and other validation methods were used on simulated data to test the significance and rationality of KBRV. In order to demonstrate the advantages of KBRV in constructing gene regulatory networks, we applied this index on real datasets (ovarian cancer datasets and exon-level RNA-Seq data in human myeloid differentiation) to illustrate its superiority over vector correlation. Conclusions We concluded that KBRV is an efficient index for detecting both linear and nonlinear relationships in high dimensional data. The correlation method for high dimensional data has possible applications in the construction of gene regulatory network.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lingfei Wang ◽  
Pieter Audenaert ◽  
Tom Michoel

AbstractStudying the impact of genetic variation on gene regulatory networks is essential to understand the biological mechanisms by which genetic variation causes variation in phenotypes. Bayesian networks provide an elegant statistical approach for multi-trait genetic mapping and modelling causal trait relationships. However, inferring Bayesian gene networks from high-dimensional genetics and genomics data is challenging, because the number of possible networks scales super-exponentially with the number of nodes, and the computational cost of conventional Bayesian network inference methods quickly becomes prohibitive. We propose an alternative method to infer high-quality Bayesian gene networks that easily scales to thousands of genes. Our method first reconstructs a node ordering by conducting pairwise causal inference tests between genes, which then allows to infer a Bayesian network via a series of independent variable selection problems, one for each gene. We demonstrate using simulated and real systems genetics data that this results in a Bayesian network with equal, and sometimes better, likelihood than the conventional methods, while having a significantly higher over-lap with groundtruth networks and being orders of magnitude faster. Moreover our method allows for a unified false discovery rate control across genes and individual edges, and thus a rigorous and easily interpretable way for tuning the sparsity level of the inferred network. Bayesian network inference using pairwise node ordering is a highly efficient approach for reconstructing gene regulatory networks when prior information for the inclusion of edges exists or can be inferred from the available data.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document