PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Inferring protein modulation from gene expression data using conditional mutual information.

  • Federico M Giorgi,
  • Gonzalo Lopez,
  • Jung H Woo,
  • Brygida Bisikirska,
  • Andrea Califano,
  • Mukesh Bansal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109569
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e109569

Abstract

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Systematic, high-throughput dissection of causal post-translational regulatory dependencies, on a genome wide basis, is still one of the great challenges of biology. Due to its complexity, however, only a handful of computational algorithms have been developed for this task. Here we present CINDy (Conditional Inference of Network Dynamics), a novel algorithm for the genome-wide, context specific inference of regulatory dependencies between signaling protein and transcription factor activity, from gene expression data. The algorithm uses a novel adaptive partitioning methodology to accurately estimate the full Condition Mutual Information (CMI) between a transcription factor and its targets, given the expression of a signaling protein. We show that CMI analysis is optimally suited to dissecting post-translational dependencies. Indeed, when tested against a gold standard dataset of experimentally validated protein-protein interactions in signal transduction networks, CINDy significantly outperforms previous methods, both in terms of sensitivity and precision.