On different aspects of network analysis in systems biology

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Abstract

Network analysis is an essential component of systems biology approaches toward understanding the molecular and cellular interactions underlying biological systems functionalities and their perturbations in disease. Regulatory and signalling pathways involve DNA, RNA, proteins and metabolites as key elements to coordinate most aspects of cellular functioning. Cellular processes depend on the structure and dynamics of gene regulatory networks and can be studied by employing a network representation of molecular interactions. This chapter describes several types of biological networks, how combination of different analytic approaches can be used to study diseases, and provides a list of selected tools for network visualization and analysis. It also introduces protein- protein interaction networks, gene regulatory networks, signalling networks and metabolic networks to illustrate concepts underlying network representation of cellular processes and molecular interactions. It finally discusses how the level of accuracy in inferring functional relationships influences the choice of methods applied for the analysis of a particular biological network type.

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Chaiboonchoe, A., Jurkowski, W., Pellet, J., Glaab, E., Kolodkin, A., Rausell, A., … Auffray, C. (2013). On different aspects of network analysis in systems biology. In Systems Biology: Integrative Biology and Simulation Tools (pp. 181–207). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6803-1_6

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