Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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PHOCOS: inferring multi-feature phenotypic crosstalk networks.

Bioinformatics 2016 June 16
MOTIVATION: Quantification of cellular changes to perturbations can provide a powerful approach to infer crosstalk among molecular components in biological networks. Existing crosstalk inference methods conduct network-structure learning based on a single phenotypic feature (e.g. abundance) of a biomarker. These approaches are insufficient for analyzing perturbation data that can contain information about multiple features (e.g. abundance, activity or localization) of each biomarker.

RESULTS: We propose a computational framework for inferring phenotypic crosstalk (PHOCOS) that is suitable for high-content microscopy or other modalities that capture multiple phenotypes per biomarker. PHOCOS uses a robust graph-learning paradigm to predict direct effects from potential indirect effects and identify errors owing to noise or missing links. The result is a multi-feature, sparse network that parsimoniously captures direct and strong interactions across phenotypic attributes of multiple biomarkers. We use simulated and biological data to demonstrate the ability of PHOCOS to recover multi-attribute crosstalk networks from cellular perturbation assays.

AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: PHOCOS is available in open source at https://github.com/AltschulerWu-Lab/PHOCOS CONTACT: [email protected] or [email protected].

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