Alignment of biological networks by integer linear programming: virus-host protein-protein interaction networks

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Abstract

Background: The alignment of protein-protein interaction networks was recently formulated as an integer quadratic programming problem, along with a linearization that can be solved by integer linear programming software tools. However, the resulting integer linear program has a huge number of variables and constraints, rendering it of no practical use. Results: We present a compact integer linear programming reformulation of the protein-protein interaction network alignment problem, which can be solved using state-of-the-art mathematical modeling and integer linear programming software tools, along with empirical results showing that small biological networks, such as virus-host protein-protein interaction networks, can be aligned in a reasonable amount of time on a personal computer and the resulting alignments are structurally coherent and biologically meaningful. Conclusions: The implementation of the integer linear programming reformulation using current mathematical modeling and integer linear programming software tools provided biologically meaningful alignments of virus-host protein-protein interaction networks.

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Llabrés, M., Riera, G., Rosselló, F., & Valiente, G. (2020). Alignment of biological networks by integer linear programming: virus-host protein-protein interaction networks. BMC Bioinformatics, 21. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-020-03733-w

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