scholarly journals A Molecular View of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Through the Lens of Interaction Network Modules

Author(s):  
Klaus Højgaard Jensen ◽  
Anna Katharina Stalder ◽  
Rasmus Wernersson ◽  
Tim-Christoph Roloff-Handschin ◽  
Daniel Hvidberg Hansen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Despite the discovery of familial cases with mutations in Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1), Guanine nucleotide exchange C9orf72, TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TARDBP) and RNA-binding protein FUS as well as a number of other genes linked to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), the etiology and molecular pathogenesis of this devastating disease is still not understood. As proteins do not act alone, conducting an analysis of ALS at the system level may provide new insights into the molecular biology of ALS and put it into relationship to other neurological diseases.Methods: A set of ALS-associated genes/proteins were collected from publicly available databases and text mining of scientific literature. We used these as seed proteins to build protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks serving as a scaffold for further analyses. From the collection of networks, a set of core modules enriched in seed proteins were identified. The molecular biology of the core modules was investigated, as were their associations to other diseases. To assess the core modules’ ability to describe unknown or less well-studied ALS biology, they were queried for proteins more recently associated to ALS and not involved in the primary analysis.Results: We describe a set of 26 ALS core modules enriched in ALS-associated proteins. We show that these ALS core modules not only capture most of the current knowledge about ALS, but they also allow us to suggest biological interdependencies. In addition, new associations of ALS networks with other neurodegenerative diseases, e.g. Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease were found. A follow-up analysis of 140 ALS-associated proteins identified since 2014 reveals a significant overrepresentation of new ALS proteins in these 26 disease modules.Conclusions: Using protein-protein interaction networks offers a relevant approach for broadening the understanding of the biological context of known ALS-associated genes. Using a bottom-up approach for the analysis of protein-protein interaction networks is a useful method to avoid bias caused by over-connected proteins. Our ALS-enriched modules cover most known biological functions associated with ALS. The presence of recently identified ALS-associated proteins in the core modules highlights the potential for using these as a scaffold for identification of novel ALS disease mechanisms.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus Højgaard Jensen ◽  
Anna Katharina Stalder ◽  
Rasmus Wernersson ◽  
Tim-Christoph Roloff-Handschin ◽  
Daniel Hvidberg Hansen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Despite the discovery of familial cases with mutations in Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1), Guanine nucleotide exchange C9orf72, TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TARDBP) and RNA-binding protein FUS as well as a number of other genes linked to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), the etiology and molecular pathogenesis of this devastating disease is still not understood. As proteins do not act alone but rather in networks, conducting an analysis of ALS at the system level may provide new insights into the molecular biology of ALS around these potential ALS-associated genes and put it into relationship to other neurological diseases.Methods: A set of ALS-associated genes/proteins were collected from publicly available databases and text mining of scientific literature. We used these as seed proteins to build protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks serving as a scaffold for further analyses. From the collection of networks, a set of core modules enriched in seed proteins were identified. The core modules were investigated for overrepresentation of Gene Ontology categories and association to other diseases. To assess the core modules’ ability to describe unknown or less well-studied ALS biology, they were queried for proteins more recently associated to ALS and not involved in the primary analysis.Results: We describe a set of 26 ALS core modules enriched in ALS-associated proteins. Our workflow is robust against individual highly connected proteins often dominating this type of analysis due to study bias or experimental artefacts. We show that these ALS core modules not only capture most of the current knowledge about ALS, but they also allow us to suggest biological interdependencies. In addition, new associations of ALS networks with other neurodegenerative diseases, e.g. Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease were found. A follow-up analysis of 140 ALS-associated proteins identified since 2014 reveals a significant overrepresentation of new ALS proteins in these 26 disease modules.Conclusions: Using protein-protein interaction networks offers a relevant approach for broadening the understanding of the biological context of known ALS-associated genes. Using a bottom-up approach for the analysis of protein-protein interaction networks is a useful method to avoid bias caused by over-connected proteins. Our ALS-enriched modules cover most known biological functions associated with ALS. The presence of recently identified ALS-associated proteins in the top network highlights the potential for using the ALS-associated networks as a scaffold for identification of novel ALS disease mechanisms, investigation of complex networks and hypothesis generation.


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