Abstract

BackgroundThe impact of a perturbation, over-expression, or repression of a key node on an organism, can be modelled based on a regulatory and/or metabolic network. Integration of these two networks could improve our global understanding of biological mechanisms triggered by a perturbation. This study focuses on improving the modelling of the regulatory network to facilitate a possible integration with the metabolic network. Previously proposed methods that study this problem fail to deal with a real-size regulatory network, computing predictions sensitive to perturbation and quantifying the predicted species behaviour more finely.ResultsTo address previously mentioned limitations, we develop a new method based on Answer Set Programming, MajS. It takes a regulatory network and a discrete partial set of observations as input. MajS tests the consistency between the input data, proposes minimal repairs on the network to establish consistency, and finally computes weighted and signed predictions over the network species. We tested MajS by comparing the HIF-1 signalling pathway with two gene-expression datasets. Our results show that MajS can predict 100% of unobserved species. When comparing MajS with two similar (discrete and quantitative) tools, we observed that compared with the discrete tool, MajS proposes a better coverage of the unobserved species, is more sensitive to system perturbations, and proposes predictions closer to real data. Compared to the quantitative tool, MajS provides more refined discrete predictions that agree with the dynamic proposed by the quantitative tool.ConclusionsMajS is a new method to test the consistency between a regulatory network and a dataset that provides computational predictions on unobserved network species. It provides fine-grained discrete predictions by outputting the weight of the predicted sign as a piece of additional information. MajS’ output, thanks to its weight, could easily be integrated with metabolic network modelling.

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