Eric Banks will present his preFPO on Monday September 22 at 1:30PM in room 402. The members of his committee are: Mona Singh, advisor; Olga Troyanskaya and Bernard Chazelle, readers; Tom Funkhouser and David Blei, nonreaders. Everyone is invited to attend his talk. His abstract follows below. ------------------------------------------ High-throughput experimental and computational approaches are enabling the collection of large-scale biological networks, consisting of proteins and the interactions among them, for a growing number of species. With appropriate computational analysis and experimental work the potential exists for uncovering the organizational principles of the cell and, consequently, protein functions and pathways, which are still largely unidentified. In this work, we introduce a novel framework for analyzing protein interaction networks in order to uncover organizational units corresponding to recurring means with which diverse biological processes are carried out. We formalize recurring patterns of interaction among different types of proteins using "network schemas"; network schemas specify descriptions of proteins and the topology of interactions among them. We develop algorithms for systematically uncovering recurring, over-represented schemas in physical interaction networks and apply these methods to the S. cerevisiae interactome, identifying hundreds of such organizational units of varying complexity. We establish the functional importance of these schemas by showing that they correspond to functionally cohesive sets of proteins, are enriched in the frequency with which they have instances in the H. sapiens interactome, and are useful for predicting protein function. Finally, we introduce NetGrep, a system for searching protein interaction networks for matches to more general network schemas. NetGrep provides an advanced graphical interface for specifying schemas and fast algorithms for extracting their matches.
participants (1)
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Melissa Lawson