Title :
From Boolean to probabilistic Boolean networks as models of genetic regulatory networks
Author :
Shmulevich, Ilya ; Dougherty, Edward R. ; Zhang, Wei
Author_Institution :
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Texas Univ., Houston, TX, USA
fDate :
11/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Mathematical and computational modeling of genetic regulatory networks promises to uncover the fundamental principles governing biological systems in an integrative and holistic manner. It also paves the way toward the development of systematic approaches for effective therapeutic intervention in disease. The central theme in this paper is the Boolean formalism as a building block for modeling complex, large-scale, and dynamical networks of genetic interactions. We discuss the goals of modeling genetic networks as well as the data requirements. The Boolean formalism is justified from several points of view. We then introduce Boolean networks and discuss their relationships to nonlinear digital filters. The role of Boolean networks in understanding cell differentiation and cellular functional states is discussed. The inference of Boolean networks from real gene expression data is considered from the viewpoints of computational learning theory and nonlinear signal processing, touching on computational complexity of learning and robustness. Then, a discussion of the need to handle uncertainty in a probabilistic framework is presented, leading to an introduction of probabilistic Boolean networks and their relationships to Markov chains. Methods for quantifying the influence of genes on other genes are presented. The general question of the potential effect of individual genes on the global dynamical network behavior is considered using stochastic perturbation analysis. This discussion then leads into the problem of target identification for therapeutic intervention via the development of several computational tools based on first-passage times in Markov chains. Examples from biology are presented throughout the paper.
Keywords :
Boolean functions; Markov processes; computational complexity; genetics; physiological models; probability; cell differentiation; cellular functional states; computational complexity; disease; first-passage times; genes influence quantification; learning; nonlinear digital filters; robustness; stochastic perturbation analysis; target identification problem; therapeutic intervention; Biological system modeling; Biological systems; Cellular networks; Computational modeling; Digital filters; Diseases; Gene expression; Genetics; Large-scale systems; Systematics;
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JPROC.2002.804686