Systems Biology (Methods in Molecular Biology)

(Tina Sui) #1

2.3 Network
Analysis


After gathering and managing information regarding biological
systems in the form of interactions networks, structural and dyna-
mical analysis provides useful information about the network archi-
tecture and the dynamics of regulatory pathways. The structural
analysis of networks allows the identification of functional modules,
regulatory motifs (including feedback and feed-forward loops), and
node properties (including node degree (ND) and betweenness
centrality (BC)). In biochemical networks, nodes can be protein,
gene, miRNA, etc. Modules are the aggregations of the densely
interconnected neighboring nodes. It is observed that the func-
tionally related nodes are located in close proximity and thus form
functional modules [30, 31]. These functionally related genes
could be associated with the same biological pathway and have
similar effects on certain disease phenotype (which fits to the prov-
erb “guilt by association”) and may be targeted by structurally
similar drugs [32, 33].
Biological networks are enriched in recurring structural pat-
terns called motifs. Network motifs are the interacting patterns that
recur significantly more often than in random networks [4]. These
motifs are sort of small molecular circuitry that the cell uses to
process information and governing dynamic response to external or
internal fluctuations [34, 35]. Feedback and feedforward loops
(FBL and FFL) are the important regulatory network motifs. Feed-
back loops are characterized by direct/indirect inhibition/activa-
tion of a node by its own target, e.g., Fig.4a, bshow the indirect
activation/inhibition of node “X” by its own target. FBLs can be
either positive or negative depending on the parity of negative links
in the loop. If parity is odd the FBL is negative (Fig.4a) and if it is
even then the FBL is positive (Fig.4b). Feedforward loops are
characterized by interactions in which a node is a mutual target of
a node and its target, e.g., in Fig.5a, bwhere “X” regulates “Y,”
and then “X” and “Y” mutually target “Z.” FFLs can either be

X

Y Z

Z

X

Y Z

X

Y Z

X

Y

Z

X

Y Z

X

Y Z

X

Y

Z

X

Y

Fig. 4Representation of all possible feedback loops (either positive or negative)
in a three-node network

254 Faiz M. Khan et al.

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