Integrating genome-scale metabolic modelling and transfer learning for human gene regulatory network reconstruction

Author(s):  
Gianvito Pio ◽  
Paolo Mignone ◽  
Giuseppe Magazzù ◽  
Guido Zampieri ◽  
Michelangelo Ceci ◽  
...  

Abstract Motivation Gene regulation is responsible for controlling numerous physiological functions and dynamically responding to environmental fluctuations. Reconstructing the human network of gene regulatory interactions is thus paramount to understanding the cell functional organisation across cell types, as well as to elucidating pathogenic processes and identifying molecular drug targets. Although significant effort has been devoted towards this direction, existing computational methods mainly rely on gene expression levels, possibly ignoring the information conveyed by mechanistic biochemical knowledge. Moreover, except for a few recent attempts, most of the existing approaches only consider the information of the organism under analysis, without exploiting the information of related model organisms. Results We propose a novel method for the reconstruction of the human gene regulatory network, based on a transfer learning strategy that synergically exploits information from human and mouse, conveyed by gene-related metabolic features generated in-silico from gene expression data. Specifically, we learn a predictive model from metabolic activity inferred via tissue-specific metabolic modelling of artificial gene knockouts. Our experiments show that the combination of our transfer learning approach with the constructed metabolic features provides a significant advantage in terms of reconstruction accuracy, as well as additional clues on the contribution of each constructed metabolic feature. Availability The system, the datasets and all the results obtained in this study are available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5237687 Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Author(s):  
Xingzhe Yang ◽  
Feng Li ◽  
Jie Ma ◽  
Yan Liu ◽  
Xuejiao Wang ◽  
...  

AbstractIn recent years, the incidence of fatigue has been increasing, and the effective prevention and treatment of fatigue has become an urgent problem. As a result, the genetic research of fatigue has become a hot spot. Transcriptome-level regulation is the key link in the gene regulatory network. The transcriptome includes messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs). MRNAs are common research targets in gene expression profiling. Noncoding RNAs, including miRNAs, lncRNAs, circRNAs and so on, have been developed rapidly. Studies have shown that miRNAs are closely related to the occurrence and development of fatigue. MiRNAs can regulate the immune inflammatory reaction in the central nervous system (CNS), regulate the transmission of nerve impulses and gene expression, regulate brain development and brain function, and participate in the occurrence and development of fatigue by regulating mitochondrial function and energy metabolism. LncRNAs can regulate dopaminergic neurons to participate in the occurrence and development of fatigue. This has certain value in the diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). CircRNAs can participate in the occurrence and development of fatigue by regulating the NF-κB pathway, TNF-α and IL-1β. The ceRNA hypothesis posits that in addition to the function of miRNAs in unidirectional regulation, mRNAs, lncRNAs and circRNAs can regulate gene expression by competitive binding with miRNAs, forming a ceRNA regulatory network with miRNAs. Therefore, we suggest that the miRNA-centered ceRNA regulatory network is closely related to fatigue. At present, there are few studies on fatigue-related ncRNA genes, and most of these limited studies are on miRNAs in ncRNAs. However, there are a few studies on the relationship between lncRNAs, cirRNAs and fatigue. Less research is available on the pathogenesis of fatigue based on the ceRNA regulatory network. Therefore, exploring the complex mechanism of fatigue based on the ceRNA regulatory network is of great significance. In this review, we summarize the relationship between miRNAs, lncRNAs and circRNAs in ncRNAs and fatigue, and focus on exploring the regulatory role of the miRNA-centered ceRNA regulatory network in the occurrence and development of fatigue, in order to gain a comprehensive, in-depth and new understanding of the essence of the fatigue gene regulatory network.


eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Clark ◽  
Michael Akam

The Drosophila embryo transiently exhibits a double-segment periodicity, defined by the expression of seven 'pair-rule' genes, each in a pattern of seven stripes. At gastrulation, interactions between the pair-rule genes lead to frequency doubling and the patterning of 14 parasegment boundaries. In contrast to earlier stages of Drosophila anteroposterior patterning, this transition is not well understood. By carefully analysing the spatiotemporal dynamics of pair-rule gene expression, we demonstrate that frequency-doubling is precipitated by multiple coordinated changes to the network of regulatory interactions between the pair-rule genes. We identify the broadly expressed but temporally patterned transcription factor, Odd-paired (Opa/Zic), as the cause of these changes, and show that the patterning of the even-numbered parasegment boundaries relies on Opa-dependent regulatory interactions. Our findings indicate that the pair-rule gene regulatory network has a temporally modulated topology, permitting the pair-rule genes to play stage-specific patterning roles.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1052-1075 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dina Elsayad ◽  
A. Ali ◽  
Howida A. Shedeed ◽  
Mohamed F. Tolba

The gene expression analysis is an important research area of Bioinformatics. The gene expression data analysis aims to understand the genes interacting phenomena, gene functionality and the genes mutations effect. The Gene regulatory network analysis is one of the gene expression data analysis tasks. Gene regulatory network aims to study the genes interactions topological organization. The regulatory network is critical for understanding the pathological phenotypes and the normal cell physiology. There are many researches that focus on gene regulatory network analysis but unfortunately some algorithms are affected by data size. Where, the algorithm runtime is proportional to the data size, therefore, some parallel algorithms are presented to enhance the algorithms runtime and efficiency. This work presents a background, mathematical models and comparisons about gene regulatory networks analysis different techniques. In addition, this work proposes Parallel Architecture for Gene Regulatory Network (PAGeneRN).


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (06) ◽  
pp. 1950035
Author(s):  
Huiqing Wang ◽  
Yuanyuan Lian ◽  
Chun Li ◽  
Yue Ma ◽  
Zhiliang Yan ◽  
...  

As a tool of interpreting and analyzing genetic data, gene regulatory network (GRN) could reveal regulatory relationships between genes, proteins, and small molecules, as well as understand physiological activities and functions within biological cells, interact in pathways, and how to make changes in the organism. Traditional GRN research focuses on the analysis of the regulatory relationships through the average of cellular gene expressions. These methods are difficult to identify the cell heterogeneity of gene expression. Existing methods for inferring GRN using single-cell transcriptional data lack expression information when genes reach steady state, and the high dimensionality of single-cell data leads to high temporal and spatial complexity of the algorithm. In order to solve the problem in traditional GRN inference methods, including the lack of cellular heterogeneity information, single-cell data complexity and lack of steady-state information, we propose a method for GRN inference using single-cell transcription and gene knockout data, called SINgle-cell transcription data-KNOckout data (SIN-KNO), which focuses on combining dynamic and steady-state information of regulatory relationship contained in gene expression. Capturing cell heterogeneity information could help understand the gene expression difference in different cells. So, we could observe gene expression changes more accurately. Gene knockout data could observe the gene expression levels at steady-state of all other genes when one gene is knockout. Classifying the genes before analyzing the single-cell data could determine a large number of non-existent regulation, greatly reducing the number of regulation required for inference. In order to show the efficiency, the proposed method has been compared with several typical methods in this area including GENIE3, JUMP3, and SINCERITIES. The results of the evaluation indicate that the proposed method can analyze the diversified information contained in the two types of data, establish a more accurate gene regulation network, and improve the computational efficiency. The method provides a new thinking for dealing with large datasets and high computational complexity of single-cell data in the GRN inference.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cong Zhang ◽  
Chunrui Bo ◽  
Lunhua Guo ◽  
Pingyang Yu ◽  
Susheng Miao ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The morbidity of thyroid carcinoma has been rising worldwide and increasing faster than any other cancer type. The most common subtype with the best prognosis is papillary thyroid cancer (PTC); however, the exact molecular pathogenesis of PTC is still not completely understood. Methods In the current study, 3 gene expression datasets (GSE3678, GSE3467, and GSE33630) and 2 miRNA expression datasets (GSE113629 and GSE73182) of PTC were selected from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database and were further used to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and deregulated miRNAs between normal thyroid tissue samples and PTC samples. Then, Gene Ontology (GO) and pathway enrichment analyses were conducted, and a protein-protein interaction (PPI) network was constructed to explore the potential mechanism of PTC carcinogenesis. The hub gene detection was performed using the CentiScaPe v2.0 plugin, and significant modules were discovered using the MCODE plugin for Cytoscape. In addition, a miRNA-gene regulatory network in PTC was constructed using common deregulated miRNAs and DEGs. Results A total of 263 common DEGs and 12 common deregulated miRNAs were identified. Then, 6 significant KEGG pathways (P < 0.05) and 82 significant GO terms were found to be enriched, indicating that PTC was closely related to amino acid metabolism, development, immune system, and endocrine system. In addition, by constructing a PPI network and miRNA-gene regulatory network, we found that hsa-miR-181a-5p regulated the most DEGs, while BCL2 was targeted by the most miRNAs. Conclusions The results of this study suggested that hsa-miR-181a-5p and BCL2 and their regulatory networks may play important roles in the pathogenesis of PTC.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aravind Venkatesan ◽  
Sushil Tripathi ◽  
Alejandro Sanz de Galdeano ◽  
Ward Blondé ◽  
Astrid Lægreid ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. e0184657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitaly V. Gursky ◽  
Konstantin N. Kozlov ◽  
Ivan V. Kulakovskiy ◽  
Asif Zubair ◽  
Paul Marjoram ◽  
...  

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