TY - JOUR
T1 - Reverse engineering of regulatory networks in human B cells
AU - Basso, Katia
AU - Margolin, Adam A.
AU - Stolovitzky, Gustavo
AU - Klein, Ulf
AU - Dalla-Favera, Riccardo
AU - Califano, Andrea
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank I. Nemenman for his expertise in Information Theory, M. Mattioli for contributing to the generation of the B-cell gene expression database and V. Miljkovic for help with the microarray hybridizations. K.B. is supported by a fellowship from the American-Italian Cancer Foundation, A.M. by the National Library of Medicine Medical Informatics Research Training Program at Columbia and U.K. by a fellowship from the Human Frontiers Science Program. This study was supported by a US National Institutes of Health grant to R.D.-F. and by the computational resources of the AMDeC Bioinformatics Core at Columbia University.
PY - 2005/4
Y1 - 2005/4
N2 - Cellular phenotypes are determined by the differential activity of networks linking coregulated genes. Available methods for the reverse engineering of such networks from genome-wide expression profiles have been successful only in the analysis of lower eukaryotes with simple genomes. Using a new method called ARACNe (algorithm for the reconstruction of accurate cellular networks), we report the reconstruction of regulatory networks from expression profiles of human B cells. The results are suggestive a hierarchical, scale-free network, where a few highly interconnected genes (hubs) account for most of the interactions. Validation of the network against available data led to the identification of MYC as a major hub, which controls a network comprising known target genes as well as new ones, which were biochemically validated. The newly identified MYC targets include some major hubs. This approach can be generally useful for the analysis of normal and pathologic networks in mammalian cells.
AB - Cellular phenotypes are determined by the differential activity of networks linking coregulated genes. Available methods for the reverse engineering of such networks from genome-wide expression profiles have been successful only in the analysis of lower eukaryotes with simple genomes. Using a new method called ARACNe (algorithm for the reconstruction of accurate cellular networks), we report the reconstruction of regulatory networks from expression profiles of human B cells. The results are suggestive a hierarchical, scale-free network, where a few highly interconnected genes (hubs) account for most of the interactions. Validation of the network against available data led to the identification of MYC as a major hub, which controls a network comprising known target genes as well as new ones, which were biochemically validated. The newly identified MYC targets include some major hubs. This approach can be generally useful for the analysis of normal and pathologic networks in mammalian cells.
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U2 - 10.1038/ng1532
DO - 10.1038/ng1532
M3 - Article
C2 - 15778709
AN - SCOPUS:16844376909
SN - 1061-4036
VL - 37
SP - 382
EP - 390
JO - Nature Genetics
JF - Nature Genetics
IS - 4
ER -