Abstract

BackgroundProtein interactions are crucial components of all cellular processes. Recently, high-throughput methods have been developed to obtain a global description of the interactome (the whole network of protein interactions for a given organism). In 2002, the yeast interactome was estimated to contain up to 80,000 potential interactions. This estimate is based on the integration of data sets obtained by various methods (mass spectrometry, two-hybrid methods, genetic studies). High-throughput methods are known, however, to yield a non-negligible rate of false positives, and to miss a fraction of existing interactions.The interactome can be represented as a graph where nodes correspond with proteins and edges with pairwise interactions. In recent years clustering methods have been developed and applied in order to extract relevant modules from such graphs. These algorithms require the specification of parameters that may drastically affect the results. In this paper we present a comparative assessment of four algorithms: Markov Clustering (MCL), Restricted Neighborhood Search Clustering (RNSC), Super Paramagnetic Clustering (SPC), and Molecular Complex Detection (MCODE).ResultsA test graph was built on the basis of 220 complexes annotated in the MIPS database. To evaluate the robustness to false positives and false negatives, we derived 41 altered graphs by randomly removing edges from or adding edges to the test graph in various proportions.Each clustering algorithm was applied to these graphs with various parameter settings, and the clusters were compared with the annotated complexes.We analyzed the sensitivity of the algorithms to the parameters and determined their optimal parameter values.We also evaluated their robustness to alterations of the test graph.We then applied the four algorithms to six graphs obtained from high-throughput experiments and compared the resulting clusters with the annotated complexes.ConclusionThis analysis shows that MCL is remarkably robust to graph alterations. In the tests of robustness, RNSC is more sensitive to edge deletion but less sensitive to the use of suboptimal parameter values. The other two algorithms are clearly weaker under most conditions.The analysis of high-throughput data supports the superiority of MCL for the extraction of complexes from interaction networks.

Highlights

  • Protein interactions are crucial components of all cellular processes

  • A test graph was built on the basis of 220 complexes annotated in the MIPS database

  • We applied the four algorithms to six graphs obtained from high-throughput experiments and compared the resulting clusters with the annotated complexes. This analysis shows that Markov Clustering (MCL) is remarkably robust to graph alterations

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Summary

Introduction

Protein interactions are crucial components of all cellular processes. Recently, high-throughput methods have been developed to obtain a global description of the interactome (the whole network of protein interactions for a given organism). In recent years clustering methods have been developed and applied in order to extract relevant modules from such graphs These algorithms require the specification of parameters that may drastically affect the results. Protein-protein interactions (PPI) play major roles in the cell: transient protein interactions are often involved in post-translational control of protein activity; enzymatic complexes ensure substrate channeling which drastically increases fluxes through metabolic pathways; large protein complexes play essential roles in basal cellular mechanisms such as DNA packaging (histones), transcription (RNA polymerase), replication (DNA polymerase), translation (ribosome), protein degradation (proteasome) To achieve this goal, several clustering methods have been applied to the protein interactome graph in order to detect highly connected subgraphs It is very difficult for a biologist to estimate the reliability of hypotheses emerging from computer-based analyses of interaction networks

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