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1.
Brief Bioinform ; 18(5): 837-850, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27473063

ABSTRACT

Differential network analysis (DiNA) denotes a recent class of network-based Bioinformatics algorithms which focus on the differences in network topologies between two states of a cell, such as healthy and disease, to identify key players in the discriminating biological processes. In contrast to conventional differential analysis, DiNA identifies changes in the interplay between molecules, rather than changes in single molecules. This ability is especially important in cases where effectors are changed, e.g. mutated, but their expression is not. A number of different DiNA approaches have been proposed, yet a comparative assessment of their performance in different settings is still lacking. In this paper, we evaluate 10 different DiNA algorithms regarding their ability to recover genetic key players from transcriptome data. We construct high-quality regulatory networks and enrich them with co-expression data from four different types of cancer. Next, we assess the results of applying DiNA algorithms on these data sets using a gold standard list (GSL). We find that local DiNA algorithms are generally superior to global algorithms, and that all DiNA algorithms outperform conventional differential expression analysis. We also assess the ability of DiNA methods to exploit additional knowledge in the underlying cellular networks. To this end, we enrich the cancer-type specific networks with known regulatory miRNAs and compare the algorithms performance in networks with and without miRNA. We find that including miRNAs consistently and considerably improves the performance of almost all tested algorithms. Our results underline the advantages of comprehensive cell models for the analysis of -omics data.


Subject(s)
Gene Regulatory Networks , Algorithms , Computational Biology , Gene Expression Profiling , MicroRNAs
2.
Bioinformatics ; 32(18): 2883-5, 2016 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27256315

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: : Descriptions of genetic variations and their effect are widely spread across the biomedical literature. However, finding all mentions of a specific variation, or all mentions of variations in a specific gene, is difficult to achieve due to the many ways such variations are described. Here, we describe SETH, a tool for the recognition of variations from text and their subsequent normalization to dbSNP or UniProt. SETH achieves high precision and recall on several evaluation corpora of PubMed abstracts. It is freely available and encompasses stand-alone scripts for isolated application and evaluation as well as a thorough documentation for integration into other applications. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: SETH is released under the Apache 2.0 license and can be downloaded from http://rockt.github.io/SETH/ CONTACT: thomas@informatik.hu-berlin.de or leser@informatik.hu-berlin.de.


Subject(s)
Data Curation , Data Mining , Genetic Variation , Computational Biology/methods , Genes , Humans , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Natural Language Processing , PubMed , Publications , Terminology as Topic
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