Title :
Interampatteness - a generic property of biochemical networks
Author :
Nordling, T.E.M. ; Jacobsen, Elling W.
Author_Institution :
Autom. Control, R. Inst. of Technol.-KTH, Stockholm, Sweden
fDate :
9/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Analysis of gene expression data sets reveals that the variation in expression is concentrated to significantly fewer dasiacharacteristic modesdasia or dasiaeigengenesdasia than the number of both recorded assays and measured genes. Previous works have stressed the importance of these characteristic modes, but neglected the equally important weak modes. Herein a generic system property dasia interampatteness dasia is defined that explains the previous feature, and assigns equal weight to the characteristic and weak modes. An interampatte network is characterised by strong INTERactions enabling simultaneous AMPlification and ATTEnuation of different signals. It is postulated that biochemical networks are interampatte, based on published experimental data and theoretical considerations. Existence of multiple time-scales and feedback loops is shown to increase the degree of interampatteness. Interampatteness has strong implications for the dynamics and reverse engineering of the network. One consequence is highly correlated changes in gene expression in response to external perturbations, even in the absence of common transcription factors, implying that interampatte gene regulatory networks erroneously may be assumed to have co-expressed/co-regulated genes. Data compression or reduction of the system dimensionality using clustering, singular value decomposition, principal component analysis or some other data mining technique results in a loss of information that will obstruct reconstruction of the underlying network.
Keywords :
biochemistry; bioinformatics; complex networks; data compression; data mining; genetics; molecular biophysics; pattern clustering; principal component analysis; singular value decomposition; biochemical networks; characteristic modes; clustering; data compression; data mining; eigengenes; gene expression; gene regulatory networks; interampatteness; principal component analysis; reverse engineering; singular value decomposition; strong interactions enabling simultaneous amplification and attenuation; system dimensionality reduction;
Journal_Title :
Systems Biology, IET
DOI :
10.1049/iet-syb.2009.0008