SiPAN: simultaneous prediction and alignment of protein-protein interaction networks

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Date

2015

Authors

Erten, Cesim

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Oxford University Press

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Motivation: Network prediction as applied to protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks has received considerable attention within the last decade. Because of the limitations of experimental techniques for interaction detection and network construction several computational methods for PPI network reconstruction and growth have been suggested. Such methods usually limit the scope of study to a single network employing data based on genomic context structure domain sequence information or existing network topology. Incorporating multiple species network data for network reconstruction and growth entails the design of novel models encompassing both network reconstruction and network alignment since the goal of network alignment is to provide functionally orthologous proteins from multiple networks and such orthology information can be used in guiding interolog transfers. However such an approach raises the classical chicken or egg problem
alignment methods assume error-free networks whereas network prediction via orthology works affectively if the functionally orthologous proteins are determined with high precision. Thus to resolve this intertwinement we propose a framework to handle both problems simultaneously that of SImultaneous Prediction and Alignment of Networks (SiPAN). Results: We present an algorithm that solves the SiPAN problem in accordance with its simultaneous nature. Bearing the same name as the defined problem itself the SiPAN algorithm employs state-of-the-art alignment and topology-based interaction confidence construction algorithms which are used as benchmark methods for comparison purposes as well. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed network reconstruction via SiPAN we consider two scenarios
one that preserves the network sizes and the other where the network sizes are increased. Through extensive tests on real-world biological data we show that the network qualities of SiPAN reconstructions are as good as those of original networks and in some cases SiPAN networks are even better especially for the former scenario. An alternative state-of-the-art network reconstruction algorithm random walk with resistance produces networks considerably worse than the original networks and those reproduced via SiPAN in both cases.

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9

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Volume

31

Issue

14

Start Page

2356

End Page

2363