Recovering genetic regulatory networks from chromatin immunoprecipitation and steady-state microarray data

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Abstract

Recent advances in high-throughput DNA microarrays and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays have enabled the learning of the structure and functionality of genetic regulatory networks. In light of these heterogeneous data sets, this paper proposes a novel approach for reconstruction of genetic regulatory networks based on the posterior probabilities of gene regulations. Built within the framework of Bayesian statistics and computational Monte Carlo techniques, the proposed approach prevents the dichotomy of classifying gene interactions as either being connected or disconnected, thereby it reduces significantly the inference errors. Simulation results corroborate the superior performance of the proposed approach relative to the existing state-of-the-art algorithms. A genetic regulatory network for Saccharomyces cerevisiae is inferred based on the published real data sets, and biological meaningful results are discussed.

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Serpedin, E., Zhao, W., & Dougherty, E. R. (2008). Recovering genetic regulatory networks from chromatin immunoprecipitation and steady-state microarray data. Eurasip Journal on Bioinformatics and Systems Biology, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/248747

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