Home  |   Login  |   Logout  |   Access Information  |   Alerts  |   Purchase History  |   Cart  |   Sitemap  |   Help   
 
Abstract
BROWSE SEARCH IEEE XPLORE GUIDE SUPPORT
arrow_leftView TOC   |arrow_leftPrevious Article   |  Next Articlearrow_right
Email/Printer Friendly Format  
 

Prediction of Co-Regulated Gene Groups through Gene Ontology
Zuojian Tang   Sieu Phan   Youlian Pan   Famili, A.F.  
Inst. for Inf. Technol., National Res. Council Canada, Ottawa, Ont.;

This paper appears in: Computational Intelligence and Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, 2007. CIBCB '07. IEEE Symposium on
Publication Date: 1-5 April 2007
On page(s): 178-184
Location: Honolulu, HI,
ISBN: 1-4244-0710-9
INSPEC Accession Number: 9507422
Current Version Published: 2007-06-04

Abstract
Gene ontology (GO) is organized in three principles, cellular component, biological process and molecular function. analysis of GO annotations of a list of differentially expressed genes on microarrays became a common approach in helping with their biological interpretation. Earlier studies in GO analysis are based on a single principle, mostly Biological Process; valuable information in the other two principles is neglected. This paper proposes a novel approach to investigate gene co-regulation based on GO annotations from all three principles. We used the semantic similarity of GO annotations as a measure to partition genes into functionally related clusters and developed a performance index (PI) that consolidates GO annotations from all three principles to measure the quality of each cluster. We successfully applied our algorithm to yeast dataset. Our results indicate that PI is a good measure of the likelihood of a cluster being co-regulated by one or more TFs. Another analysis based on individual GO principle indicates that gene annotations in biological process are the most informative and those in cellular component are the least informative with regard of gene co-regulation. However, none of the analyses based on an individual principle could provide satisfactory classification. It is important to consider gene annotations in all three principles

Index Terms
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.

References
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
Citing Documents
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
You are not logged in.
Guests may access Abstract records free of charge.
Login
Username
Password
» Forgot your password?
Please remember to log out when you have finished your session.
You must log in to access:
• Advanced or Author Search
• CrossRef Search
• AbstractPlus Records
• Full Text PDF
• Full Text HTML
Access this document
Full Text: PDF (7646 KB)
» Buy this document now
»  Learn more about
»  Learn more about
    purchasing articles
    and standards
Download this citation
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
 
arrow_leftView TOC   |arrow_leftPrevious Article   |  Next Articlearrow_right   |  Back to toparrow_up
Indexed by IEE Inspec
© Copyright 2009 IEEE – All Rights Reserved