Dissecting molecular network structures using a network subgraph approach

Author:

Huang Chien-Hung1ORCID,Zaenudin Efendi23ORCID,Tsai Jeffrey J.P.2,Kurubanjerdjit Nilubon4,Dessie Eskezeia Y.2ORCID,Ng Ka-Lok25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, National Formosa University, Yunlin, Taiwan

2. Department of Bioinformatics and Medical Engineering, Asia University, Taichung, Taiwan

3. Research Center for Informatics, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Bandung, Indonesia

4. School of Information Technology, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai, Thailand

5. Department of Medical Research, China Medical University Hospital, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

Abstract

Biological processes are based on molecular networks, which exhibit biological functions through interactions of genetic elements or proteins. This study presents a graph-based method to characterize molecular networks by decomposing the networks into directed multigraphs: network subgraphs. Spectral graph theory, reciprocity and complexity measures were used to quantify the network subgraphs. Graph energy, reciprocity and cyclomatic complexity can optimally specify network subgraphs with some degree of degeneracy. Seventy-one molecular networks were analyzed from three network types: cancer networks, signal transduction networks, and cellular processes. Molecular networks are built from a finite number of subgraph patterns and subgraphs with large graph energies are not present, which implies a graph energy cutoff. In addition, certain subgraph patterns are absent from the three network types. Thus, the Shannon entropy of the subgraph frequency distribution is not maximal. Furthermore, frequently-observed subgraphs are irreducible graphs. These novel findings warrant further investigation and may lead to important applications. Finally, we observed that cancer-related cellular processes are enriched with subgraph-associated driver genes. Our study provides a systematic approach for dissecting biological networks and supports the conclusion that there are organizational principles underlying molecular networks.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Asia University

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference100 articles.

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