Document Type
Article
Journal Title
Gene Regulation and Systems Biology
Publication Date
3-31-2010
Volume
4
Abstract
Perturbations of gene regulatory networks are essentially responsible for oncogenesis. Therefore, inferring the gene regulatory networks is a key step to overcoming cancer. In this work, we propose a method for inferring directed gene regulatory networks based on soft computing rules, which can identify important cause-effect regulatory relations of gene expression. First, we identify important genes associated with a specific cancer (colon cancer) using a supervised learning approach. Next, we reconstruct the gene regulatory networks by inferring the regulatory relations among the identified genes, and their regulated relations by other genes within the genome. We obtain two meaningful findings. One is that upregulated genes are regulated by more genes than downregulated ones, while downregulated genes regulate more genes than upregulated ones. The other one is that tumor suppressors suppress tumor activators and activate other tumor suppressors strongly, while tumor activators activate other tumor activators and suppress tumor suppressors weakly, indicating the robustness of biological systems. These findings provide valuable insights into the pathogenesis of cancer.
DOI Link
ISSN
1177-6250
Rights
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License.
Recommended Citation
Wang, Xiaosheng and Gotoh, Osamu, "Inference of cancer-specific gene regulatory networks using soft computing rules." (2010). Journal Articles: Genetics, Cell Biology & Anatomy. 8.
https://digitalcommons.unmc.edu/com_gcba_articles/8