Title :
Dynamic measure of gene co-regulation
Author :
Farina, L. ; De Santis, A. ; Morelli, G. ; Ruberti, I.
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Informatica e Sistemistica `Antonio Ruberti´´, Univ. di Roma `La Sapienza´´, Rome
Abstract :
Gene expression is to a large extent controlled at the level of mRNA accumulation. Genes whose products function together are likely under a common regulatory system (e.g. signal transduction pathways, sets of regulatory proteins) such that they are expressed in a coordinated manner. This property has been frequently used in the analysis of genome-wide expression data, as the experimental observation that a group of genes is co-expressed frequently implies that the genes share a common regulatory mechanism. The authors have investigated the situation in which dissimilarity in gene-expression time profiles may still result from the presence of the same regulatory signal, as in the case of common transcription factors. To this aim, a dynamic model that takes into account the effect of specific mRNA degradation on the shape of gene-expression time series has been developed, and the concept of `dynamically co-regulated´ genes has accordingly been introduced as the goodness-of-fit to such a model (called dynamic R2). The statistical analysis of dynamic R2 over a number of different experimental data sets and organisms shows that the presence of dynamically co-regulated genes is by far more significant than that expected from the randomised data. Furthermore, as an example of the usefulness of the proposed method, genome-wide yeast measurements such as cell-cycle time series and transcription factors targets data, were used to prove that dynamic co-regulation is statistically related to the presence of common transcription factor(s). This latter property is very useful when trying to infer computational indications of co-regulation for not-yet annotated genes that do not display a co-expression pattern
Keywords :
cellular biophysics; genetics; macromolecules; organic compounds; annotated genes; cell-cycle time series; common regulatory mechanism; common transcription factor(s); gene co-regulation; gene expression; genome-wide expression data; mRNA accumulation; regulatory signal; signal transduction pathways; specific mRNA degradation;
Journal_Title :
Systems Biology, IET
DOI :
10.1049/iet-syb:20060031