Protein complexes and functional modules in molecular networks
Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology · Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
Proteins, nucleic acids, and small molecules form a dense network of molecular interactions in a cell. Molecules are nodes of this network, and the interactions between them are edges. The architecture of molecular networks can reveal important principles of cellular organization and function, similarly to the way that protein structure tells us about the function and organization of a protein. Computational analysis of molecular networks has been primarily concerned with node degree [Wagner, A. & Fell, D. A. (2001) Proc. R. Soc. London Ser. B 268, 1803-1810; Jeong, H., Tombor, B., Albert, R., Oltvai, Z. N. & Barabasi, A. L. (2000) Nature 407, 651-654] or degree correlation [Maslov, S. & Sneppen, K. (2002)…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Modularity (biology)
- Computer science
- Computational biology
- Function (biology)
- RNA splicing
- Biology
- Gene
- Genetics