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Article: Method of regulatory network that can explore protein regulations for disease classification

TitleMethod of regulatory network that can explore protein regulations for disease classification
Authors
KeywordsRegulatory network
Disease classification
Protein regulation
Issue Date2010
Citation
Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, 2010, v. 48, n. 2-3, p. 119-127 How to Cite?
AbstractObjective: To develop regulatory network to explore and model the regulatory relationships of protein biomarkers and classify different disease groups. Methods: Regulatory network is constructed to be a hopfield-like network with nodes representing biomarkers and directional connections to be regulations in between. The input to the network is the measured expression levels of biomarkers, and the output is the summation of regulatory strengths from other biomarkers. The network is optimized towards minimizing the energy function that is defined as the measure of the disagreement between the input and output of the network. To simulate more complicated regulations, a sigmoid kernel function is imposed on each node to construct a non-linear regulatory network. Results: Two datasets have been used as test beds, one dataset includes patients of nasopharyngeal carcinoma with different responses to chemotherapy drug, and the other consists of patients of severe acute respiratory syndrome, influenza, and control normals. The regulatory networks among protein biomarkers were reconstructed for different disease conditions in each dataset. We demonstrated our methods have better classification capability when comparing with conventional methods including Fisher linear discriminant (FLD), K-nearest neighborhood (KNN), linear support vector machines (linSVM) and radial basis function based support vector machines (rbfSVM). Conclusion: The derived networks can effectively capture the unique regulatory patterns of protein markers associated with different patient groups and hence can be used for disease classification. The discovered regulation relationships can potentially provide insights to revealing the molecular signaling pathways.In this paper, a novel technique of regulatory network is proposed on purpose of modeling biomarker regulations and classifying different disease groups. The network is composed of a certain number of nodes that are directionally connected in between in which nodes denote predictors and connections to be the regulation relationship. The network is optimized towards minimizing its energy function with biomarker expression data acquired from a specific patient group, thus the optimized network can model the regulatory relationship of biomarkers under the same circumstance. To simulate more complicated regulations, a sigmoid kernel function is imposed on each node to construct a non-linear regulatory network. The regulatory network can extract unique features of each disease condition, thus one immediate application of regulatory network is to classifying different diseases. We demonstrated that regulatory network is capable of performing disease classification through comparing with conventional methods including FLD, KNN, linSVM and rbfSVM on two protein datasets. We believe our method is promising in mining knowledge of protein regulations and be powerful for disease classification. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/251660
ISSN
2023 Impact Factor: 6.1
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 1.723
ISI Accession Number ID

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorWang, H. Q.-
dc.contributor.authorZhu, H. L.-
dc.contributor.authorCho, W. C.S.-
dc.contributor.authorYip, T. T.C.-
dc.contributor.authorNgan, R. K.C.-
dc.contributor.authorLaw, S. C.K.-
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-08T05:00:36Z-
dc.date.available2018-03-08T05:00:36Z-
dc.date.issued2010-
dc.identifier.citationArtificial Intelligence in Medicine, 2010, v. 48, n. 2-3, p. 119-127-
dc.identifier.issn0933-3657-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/251660-
dc.description.abstractObjective: To develop regulatory network to explore and model the regulatory relationships of protein biomarkers and classify different disease groups. Methods: Regulatory network is constructed to be a hopfield-like network with nodes representing biomarkers and directional connections to be regulations in between. The input to the network is the measured expression levels of biomarkers, and the output is the summation of regulatory strengths from other biomarkers. The network is optimized towards minimizing the energy function that is defined as the measure of the disagreement between the input and output of the network. To simulate more complicated regulations, a sigmoid kernel function is imposed on each node to construct a non-linear regulatory network. Results: Two datasets have been used as test beds, one dataset includes patients of nasopharyngeal carcinoma with different responses to chemotherapy drug, and the other consists of patients of severe acute respiratory syndrome, influenza, and control normals. The regulatory networks among protein biomarkers were reconstructed for different disease conditions in each dataset. We demonstrated our methods have better classification capability when comparing with conventional methods including Fisher linear discriminant (FLD), K-nearest neighborhood (KNN), linear support vector machines (linSVM) and radial basis function based support vector machines (rbfSVM). Conclusion: The derived networks can effectively capture the unique regulatory patterns of protein markers associated with different patient groups and hence can be used for disease classification. The discovered regulation relationships can potentially provide insights to revealing the molecular signaling pathways.In this paper, a novel technique of regulatory network is proposed on purpose of modeling biomarker regulations and classifying different disease groups. The network is composed of a certain number of nodes that are directionally connected in between in which nodes denote predictors and connections to be the regulation relationship. The network is optimized towards minimizing its energy function with biomarker expression data acquired from a specific patient group, thus the optimized network can model the regulatory relationship of biomarkers under the same circumstance. To simulate more complicated regulations, a sigmoid kernel function is imposed on each node to construct a non-linear regulatory network. The regulatory network can extract unique features of each disease condition, thus one immediate application of regulatory network is to classifying different diseases. We demonstrated that regulatory network is capable of performing disease classification through comparing with conventional methods including FLD, KNN, linSVM and rbfSVM on two protein datasets. We believe our method is promising in mining knowledge of protein regulations and be powerful for disease classification. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofArtificial Intelligence in Medicine-
dc.subjectRegulatory network-
dc.subjectDisease classification-
dc.subjectProtein regulation-
dc.titleMethod of regulatory network that can explore protein regulations for disease classification-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.artmed.2009.07.011-
dc.identifier.pmid19962281-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-77951634382-
dc.identifier.volume48-
dc.identifier.issue2-3-
dc.identifier.spage119-
dc.identifier.epage127-
dc.identifier.isiWOS:000275844400007-
dc.identifier.issnl0933-3657-

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