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Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2015

Genetics and Genomics

Models

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Loregic: A Method To Characterize The Cooperative Logic Of Regulatory Factors, Daifeng Wang, Koon-Kiu Yan, Cristina Sisu, Chao Cheng, Joel Rozowsky, William Meyerson, Mark B. Gerstein Apr 2015

Loregic: A Method To Characterize The Cooperative Logic Of Regulatory Factors, Daifeng Wang, Koon-Kiu Yan, Cristina Sisu, Chao Cheng, Joel Rozowsky, William Meyerson, Mark B. Gerstein

Dartmouth Scholarship

The topology of the gene-regulatory network has been extensively analyzed. Now, given the large amount of available functional genomic data, it is possible to go beyond this and systematically study regulatory circuits in terms of logic elements. To this end, we present Loregic, a computational method integrating gene expression and regulatory network data, to characterize the cooperativity of regulatory factors. Loregic uses all 16 possible two-input-one-output logic gates (e.g. AND or XOR) to describe triplets of two factors regulating a common target. We attempt to find the gate that best matches each triplet’s observed gene expression pattern across many conditions. …


Machine Learning Methods Enable Predictive Modeling Of Antibody Feature:Function Relationships In Rv144 Vaccinees, Ickwon Choi, Amy W. Chung, Todd J. Suscovich, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapha, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Robert J. O'Connell, Donald Francis, Merlin L. Robb, Nelson L. Michael, Jerome H. Kim, Galit Alter, Margaret E. Ackerman, Chris Bailey-Kellogg Apr 2015

Machine Learning Methods Enable Predictive Modeling Of Antibody Feature:Function Relationships In Rv144 Vaccinees, Ickwon Choi, Amy W. Chung, Todd J. Suscovich, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapha, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Robert J. O'Connell, Donald Francis, Merlin L. Robb, Nelson L. Michael, Jerome H. Kim, Galit Alter, Margaret E. Ackerman, Chris Bailey-Kellogg

Dartmouth Scholarship

The adaptive immune response to vaccination or infection can lead to the production of specific antibodies to neutralize the pathogen or recruit innate immune effector cells for help. The non-neutralizing role of antibodies in stimulating effector cell responses may have been a key mechanism of the protection observed in the RV144 HIV vaccine trial. In an extensive investigation of a rich set of data collected from RV144 vaccine recipients, we here employ machine learning methods to identify and model associations between antibody features (IgG subclass and antigen specificity) and effector function activities (antibody dependent cellular phagocytosis, cellular cytotoxicity, and cytokine …


An Approach For Determining And Measuring Network Hierarchy Applied To Comparing The Phosphorylome And The Regulome, Chao Cheng, Erik Andrews, Koon-Kiu Yan, Matthew Ung, Daifeng Wang, Mark Gerstein Mar 2015

An Approach For Determining And Measuring Network Hierarchy Applied To Comparing The Phosphorylome And The Regulome, Chao Cheng, Erik Andrews, Koon-Kiu Yan, Matthew Ung, Daifeng Wang, Mark Gerstein

Dartmouth Scholarship

Many biological networks naturally form a hierarchy with a preponderance of downward information flow. In this study, we define a score to quantify the degree of hierarchy in a network and develop a simulated-annealing algorithm to maximize the hierarchical score globally over a network. We apply our algorithm to determine the hierarchical structure of the phosphorylome in detail and investigate the correlation between its hierarchy and kinase properties. We also compare it to the regulatory network, finding that the phosphorylome is more hierarchical than the regulome.


Allelic Polymorphism Of Gigantea Is Responsible For Naturally Occurring Variation In Circadian Period In Brassica Rapa, Qiguang Xie, Ping Lou, Victor Hermand, Rashid Aman Mar 2015

Allelic Polymorphism Of Gigantea Is Responsible For Naturally Occurring Variation In Circadian Period In Brassica Rapa, Qiguang Xie, Ping Lou, Victor Hermand, Rashid Aman

Dartmouth Scholarship

GIGANTEA (GI) was originally identified by a late-flowering mutant in Arabidopsis, but subsequently has been shown to act in circadian period determination, light inhibition of hypocotyl elongation, and responses to multiple abiotic stresses, including tolerance to high salt and cold (freezing) temperature. Genetic mapping and analysis of families of heterogeneous inbred lines showed that natural variation in GI is responsible for a major quantitative trait locus in circadian period in Brassica rapa. We confirmed this conclusion by transgenic rescue of an Arabidopsis gi-201 loss of function mutant. The two B. rapa GI alleles each fully rescued the …


Modeling Neurovascular Coupling From Clustered Parameter Sets For Multimodal Eeg-Nirs, M. Tanveer Talukdar, H. Robert Frost, Solomon G. G. Diamond Feb 2015

Modeling Neurovascular Coupling From Clustered Parameter Sets For Multimodal Eeg-Nirs, M. Tanveer Talukdar, H. Robert Frost, Solomon G. G. Diamond

Dartmouth Scholarship

Despite significant improvements in neuroimaging technologies and analysis methods, the fundamental relationship between local changes in cerebral hemodynamics and the underlying neural activity remains largely unknown. In this study, a data driven approach is proposed for modeling this neurovascular coupling relationship from simultaneously acquired electroencephalographic (EEG) and near-infrared spectroscopic (NIRS) data. The approach uses gamma transfer functions to map EEG spectral envelopes that reflect time-varying power variations in neural rhythms to hemodynamics measured with NIRS during median nerve stimulation. The approach is evaluated first with simulated EEG-NIRS data and then by applying the method to experimental EEG-NIRS data measured from …


Mapping The Pareto Optimal Design Space For A Functionally Deimmunized Biotherapeutic Candidate, Regina S. Salvat, Andrew S. Parker, Yoonjoo Choi, Chris Bailey-Kellogg, Karl E. Griswold Jan 2015

Mapping The Pareto Optimal Design Space For A Functionally Deimmunized Biotherapeutic Candidate, Regina S. Salvat, Andrew S. Parker, Yoonjoo Choi, Chris Bailey-Kellogg, Karl E. Griswold

Dartmouth Scholarship

The immunogenicity of biotherapeutics can bottleneck development pipelines and poses a barrier to widespread clinical application. As a result, there is a growing need for improved deimmunization technologies. We have recently described algorithms that simultaneously optimize proteins for both reduced T cell epitope content and high-level function. In silico analysis of this dual objective design space reveals that there is no single global optimum with respect to protein deimmunization. Instead, mutagenic epitope deletion yields a spectrum of designs that exhibit tradeoffs between immunogenic potential and molecular function. The leading edge of this design space is the Pareto frontier, i.e. the …