Untangling the wires: A strategy to trace functional interactions in signaling and gene networks
- Boris N. Kholodenko*,†,
- Anatoly Kiyatkin*,
- Frank J. Bruggeman‡,
- Eduardo Sontag§,
- Hans V. Westerhoff‡, and
- Jan B. Hoek*
- *Department of Pathology, Anatomy and Cell Biology, Thomas Jefferson University, 1020 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107; ‡Department of Microbial Physiology, Free University, Biocentrum, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; and §Department of Mathematics, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854
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Communicated by Rudolf E. Kalman, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Gainesville, FL (received for review March 30, 2002)
Abstract
Emerging technologies have enabled the acquisition of large genomics and proteomics data sets. However, current methodologies for analysis do not permit interpretation of the data in ways that unravel cellular networking. We propose a quantitative method for determining functional interactions in cellular signaling and gene networks. It can be used to explore cell systems at a mechanistic level or applied within a “modular” framework, which dramatically decreases the number of variables to be assayed. This method is based on a mathematical derivation that demonstrates how the topology and strength of network connections can be retrieved from experimentally measured network responses to successive perturbations of all modules. Importantly, our analysis can reveal functional interactions even when the components of the system are not all known. Under these circumstances, some connections retrieved by the analysis will not be direct but correspond to the interaction routes through unidentified elements. The method is tested and illustrated by using computer-generated responses of a modeled mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade and gene network.
Footnotes
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↵ † To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: Boris.Kholodenko{at}mail.tju.edu.
- Abbreviations:
- MAPK,
- mitogen-activated protein kinase;
- MKK,
- MAPK kinase;
- MKKK,
- MKK kinase;
- P,
- monophosphorylated;
- PP,
- bisphosphorylated
- Copyright © 2002, The National Academy of Sciences





