Abstract
Statistical learning of the structures of cellular networks, such as protein signaling pathways, is a topical research field in computational systems biology. To get the most information out of experimental data, it is often required to develop a tailored statistical approach rather than applying one of the off-the-shelf network reconstruction methods. The focus of this paper is on learning the structure of the mTOR protein signaling pathway from immunoblotting protein phosphorylation data. Under two experimental conditions eleven phosphorylation sites of eight key proteins of the mTOR pathway were measured at ten non-equidistant time points. For the statistical analysis we propose a new advanced hierarchically coupled non-homogeneous dynamic Bayesian network (NH-DBN) model, and we consider various data imputation methods for dealing with non-equidistant temporal observations. Because of the absence of a true gold standard network, we propose to use predictive probabilities in combination with a leave-one-out cross validation strategy to objectively cross-compare the accuracies of different NH-DBN models and data imputation methods. Finally, we employ the best combination of model and data imputation method for predicting the structure of the mTOR protein signaling pathway.
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