Background: Phylogenies capture the evolutionary ancestry linking extant species. Correlations and similarities among a set of species are mediated by and need to be understood in terms of the phylogenic tree. In a similar way it has been argued that biological networks also induce correlations among sets of interacting genes or their protein products.Results: We develop suitable statistical resampling schemes that can incorporate these two potential sources of correlation into a single inferential framework. To illustrate our approach we apply it to protein interaction data in yeast and investigate whether the phylogenetic trees of interacting proteins in a panel of yeast species are more similar than would be expected by chance.Conclusions: While we find only negligible evidence for such increased levels of similarities, our statistical approach allows us to resolve the previously reported contradictory results on the levels of co-evolution induced by protein-protein interactions. We conclude with a discussion as to how we may employ the statistical framework developed here in further functional and evolutionary analyses of biological networks and systems. © 2010 Kelly and Stumpf; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Kelly, W. P., & Stumpf, M. P. H. (2010). Trees on networks: Resolving statistical patterns of phylogenetic similarities among interacting proteins. BMC Bioinformatics, 11. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-11-470
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