Abstract

BackgroundIdentifying gene regulatory networks is an important task for understanding biological systems. Time-course measurement data became a valuable resource for inferring gene regulatory networks. Various methods have been presented for reconstructing the networks from time-course measurement data. However, existing methods have been validated on only a limited number of benchmark datasets, and rarely verified on real biological systems.ResultsWe first integrated benchmark time-course gene expression datasets from previous studies and reassessed the baseline methods. We observed that GENIE3-time, a tree-based ensemble method, achieved the best performance among the baselines. In this study, we introduce BTNET, a boosted tree based gene regulatory network inference algorithm which improves the state-of-the-art. We quantitatively validated BTNET on the integrated benchmark dataset. The AUROC and AUPR scores of BTNET were higher than those of the baselines. We also qualitatively validated the results of BTNET through an experiment on neuroblastoma cells treated with an antidepressant. The inferred regulatory network from BTNET showed that brachyury, a transcription factor, was regulated by fluoxetine, an antidepressant, which was verified by the expression of its downstream genes.ConclusionsWe present BTENT that infers a GRN from time-course measurement data using boosting algorithms. Our model achieved the highest AUROC and AUPR scores on the integrated benchmark dataset. We further validated BTNET qualitatively through a wet-lab experiment and showed that BTNET can produce biologically meaningful results.

Highlights

  • Identifying gene regulatory networks is an important task for understanding biological systems

  • We qualitatively validated the results of BTNET through an experiment on neuroblastoma cells treated with an antidepressant

  • Results and discussion we briefly describe the 8 benchmark datasets we used for the quantitative evaluations and report the Area Under Receiver Operating Characteristic (AUROC) and Area Under Precision-Recall (AUPR) scores of our BTNET method and 9 baseline methods

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying gene regulatory networks is an important task for understanding biological systems. Timecourse measurement data became a valuable resource for inferring gene regulatory networks. Various methods have been presented for reconstructing the networks from time-course measurement data. Reconstructing the gene regulatory network is important for understanding the biological system. A good deal of research on reverse-engineering has been conducted using the gene expression data [6,7,8,9]. Park et al BMC Systems Biology 2018, 12(Suppl 2): validate various inference algorithms [10, 11]. These methods rely on mostly steady-state expression data which is a snapshot of a biological process in a specific moment. Analyzing time-course data can help us to understand developmental and time-course biological processes and mechanism of perturbation [1, 12]

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