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Probabilistic Boolean networks: a rule-based uncertainty model for gene regulatory networks

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TLDR
Probabilistic Boolean Networks (PBN) are introduced that share the appealing rule-based properties of Boolean networks, but are robust in the face of uncertainty.
Abstract
Motivation: Our goal is to construct a model for genetic regulatory networks such that the model class: (i) incorporates rule-based dependencies between genes; (ii) allows the systematic study of global network dynamics; (iii) is able to cope with uncertainty, both in the data and the model selection; and (iv) permits the quantification of the relative influence and sensitivity of genes in their interactions with other genes. Results: We introduce Probabilistic Boolean Networks (PBN) that share the appealing rule-based properties of Boolean networks, but are robust in the face of uncertainty. We show how the dynamics of these networks can be studied in the probabilistic context of Markov chains, with standard Boolean networks being special cases. Then, we discuss the relationship between PBNs and Bayesian networks—a family of graphical models that explicitly represent probabilistic relationships between variables. We show how probabilistic dependencies between a gene and its parent genes, constituting the basic building blocks of Bayesian networks, can be obtained from PBNs. Finally, we present methods for quantifying the influence of genes on other genes, within the context of PBNs. Examples illustrating the above concepts are presented throughout the paper.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Scalable approach for effective control of gene regulatory networks

TL;DR: It is argued that it is possible to improve scalability by reducing the number of genes to be considered by the control policy, and a novel method that considers gene relevancy to estimate genes that are less important for control is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic networks: processing data, regulatory network modelling and their analysis

TL;DR: The state of the art in genetic network research field is reviewed, focusing on the latest techniques developed for processing raw expression data for reconstructing genetic networks and several popular models for inferring genetic networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Novel Approach for Mining and Fuzzy Simulation of Subnetworks From Large Biomolecular Networks

TL;DR: Experimental results on human gene interaction networks and gene expression time series data for the human cell cycle indicate that the approach is promising for subnetwork mining and simulation from large biomolecular networks, as it produces a better convergence between continuous modeling and experiments.
References
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Book

The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution

TL;DR: The structure of rugged fitness landscapes and the structure of adaptive landscapes underlying protein evolution, and the architecture of genetic regulatory circuits and its evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic stability and epigenesis in randomly constructed genetic nets

TL;DR: The hypothesis that contemporary organisms are also randomly constructed molecular automata is examined by modeling the gene as a binary (on-off) device and studying the behavior of large, randomly constructed nets of these binary “genes”.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Bayesian networks to analyze expression data

TL;DR: A new framework for discovering interactions between genes based on multiple expression measurements is proposed and a method for recovering gene interactions from microarray data is described using tools for learning Bayesian networks.
Book

An introduction to Bayesian networks

TL;DR: The principal ideas of probabilistic reasoning - known as Bayesian networks - are outlined and their practical implications illustrated and are intended for MSc students in knowledge-based systems, artificial intelligence and statistics, and for professionals in decision support systems applications and research.
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