scholarly journals Predicting anti-cancer activity in flavonoids - a graph theoretic approach

Author(s):  
Simon Mukwembi ◽  
Farai Nyabadza

In drug design, there are two major causes of drug failure in the clinic. First, the drug has to work, and second, the drug should be safe. Identifying compounds that work for certain ailments require enormous experimental time and, in general, is cost-intensive. In this paper, we are concerned with melanoma, a special type of cancer that affects the skin. In particular, we seek to provide a mathematical model that can predict the ability of flavonoids, a vast and natural class of compounds that are found in plants, in reversing or alleviating melanoma. The basis for our model is the conception of a new graph parameter called, for lack of better terminology, graph activity, which captures melanoma cancer healing properties of the flavonoids. With a superior coefficient of determination, R squared=1, the new model faithfully reproduces anti-cancer activities of some known data sets. We demonstrate that the model can be used to rank the healing abilities of flavonoids which could be a powerful tool in the screening, and identification, of compounds for drug candidates.

Genetics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 165 (4) ◽  
pp. 2235-2247
Author(s):  
Immanuel V Yap ◽  
David Schneider ◽  
Jon Kleinberg ◽  
David Matthews ◽  
Samuel Cartinhour ◽  
...  

AbstractFor many species, multiple maps are available, often constructed independently by different research groups using different sets of markers and different source material. Integration of these maps provides a higher density of markers and greater genome coverage than is possible using a single study. In this article, we describe a novel approach to comparing and integrating maps by using abstract graphs. A map is modeled as a directed graph in which nodes represent mapped markers and edges define the order of adjacent markers. Independently constructed graphs representing corresponding maps from different studies are merged on the basis of their common loci. Absence of a path between two nodes indicates that their order is undetermined. A cycle indicates inconsistency among the mapping studies with regard to the order of the loci involved. The integrated graph thus produced represents a complete picture of all of the mapping studies that comprise it, including all of the ambiguities and inconsistencies among them. The objective of this representation is to guide additional research aimed at interpreting these ambiguities and inconsistencies in locus order rather than presenting a “consensus order” that ignores these problems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1706 ◽  
pp. 012115
Author(s):  
P Sangeetha ◽  
M Shanmugapriya ◽  
R Sundareswaran ◽  
K Sowmya ◽  
S Srinidhi

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