articleGenome biologyMay 19, 2010GOLD OA

A human functional protein interaction network and its application to cancer data analysis

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research · Occupational Cancer Research Centre · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

One challenge facing biologists is to tease out useful information from massive data sets for further analysis. A pathway-based analysis may shed light by projecting candidate genes onto protein functional relationship networks. We are building such a pathway-based analysis system.

Results

We have constructed a protein functional interaction network by extending curated pathways with non-curated sources of information, including protein-protein interactions, gene coexpression, protein domain interaction, Gene Ontology (GO) annotations and text-mined protein interactions, which cover close to 50% of the human proteome. By applying this network to two glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) data sets and projecting cancer candidate genes onto the network, we found that the majority of GBM candidate genes form a cluster and are closer than expected by chance, and the majority of GBM samples have sequence-altered genes in two network modules, one mainly comprising genes whose products are localized in the cytoplasm and plasma membrane, and another comprising gene products in the nucleus. Both modules are highly enriched in known oncogenes, tumor suppressors and genes involved in signal transduction. Similar network patterns were also found in breast, colorectal and pancreatic cancers.

Citation impact

719
total citations
FWCI
14.02
Percentile
100%
References
92
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biology
  • Human genetics
  • Genome Biology
  • Computational biology
  • Cancer
  • Protein Interaction Networks
  • Interaction network
  • Computational genomics
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Funding