articleBMC BioinformaticsJan 24, 2007GOLD OA

Gene network interconnectedness and the generalized topological overlap measure

National University of Singapore · University of California, Los Angeles

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

Network methods are increasingly used to represent the interactions of genes and/or proteins. Genes or proteins that are directly linked may have a similar biological function or may be part of the same biological pathway. Since the information on the connection (adjacency) between 2 nodes may be noisy or incomplete, it can be desirable to consider alternative measures of pairwise interconnectedness. Here we study a class of measures that are proportional to the number of neighbors that a pair of nodes share in common. For example, the topological overlap measure by Ravasz et al. 1 can be interpreted as a measure of agreement between the m = 1 step neighborhoods of 2 nodes. Several studies have shown that two proteins having a higher topological overlap are more likely to belong to the same functional class than proteins having a lower topological overlap. Here we address the question whether a measure of topological overlap based on higher-order neighborhoods could give rise to a more robust and sensitive measure of interconnectedness.

Results

We generalize the topological overlap measure from m = 1 step neighborhoods to m > or = 2 step neighborhoods. This allows us to define the m-th order generalized topological overlap measure (GTOM) by (i) counting the number of m-step neighbors that a pair of nodes share and (ii) normalizing it to take a value between 0 and 1. Using theoretical arguments, a yeast co-expression network application, and a fly protein network application, we illustrate the usefulness of the proposed measure for module detection and gene neighborhood analysis.

Citation impact

688
total citations
FWCI
6.05
Percentile
100%
References
37
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Measure (data warehouse)
  • Pairwise comparison
  • Topology (electrical circuits)
  • Adjacency list
  • Gene regulatory network
  • Mathematics
  • Class (philosophy)
  • Adjacency matrix
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