Topological and causal structure of the yeast transcriptional regulatory network

被引:417
作者
Guelzim, N
Bottani, S
Bourgine, P
Képès, F
机构
[1] ATelier Genom Cognit, CNRS, ESA 8071, Genopole, F-91000 Evry, France
[2] Ecole Polytech, Ctr Rech Epistemol Appl, F-75230 Paris, France
[3] Univ Paris 07, UFR Phys, Grp Modelisat Phys Interfaces Biol, Paris, France
关键词
D O I
10.1038/ng873
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Interpretation of high-throughput biological data requires a knowledge of the design principles underlying the networks that sustain cellular functions. Of particular importance is the genetic network, a set of genes that interact through directed transcriptional regulation. Genes that exert a regulatory role encode dedicated transcription factors (hereafter referred to as regulating proteins) that can bind to specific DNA control regions of regulated genes to activate or inhibit their transcription. Regulated genes may themselves act in a regulatory manner, in which case they participate in a causal pathway. Looping pathways form feedback circuits. Because a gene can have several connections, circuits and pathways may crosslink and thus represent connected components. We have created a graph of 909 genetically or biochemically established interactions among 491 yeast genes. The number of regulating proteins per regulated gene has a narrow distribution with an exponential decay. The number of regulated genes per regulating protein has a broader distribution with a decay resembling a power law. Assuming in computer-generated graphs that gene connections fulfill these distributions but are otherwise random, the local clustering of connections and the number of short feedback circuits are largely underestimated. This deviation from randomness probably reflects functional constraints that include biosynthetic cost, response delay and differentiative and homeostatic regulation.
引用
收藏
页码:60 / 63
页数:4
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