Advanced graph mining methods for protein analysis


Autoria(s): Chen, Yi-Ping; Rong, Jia; Li, Gang
Contribuinte(s)

Chen, Jake Y.

Lonardi, Stefano

Data(s)

01/01/2010

Resumo

As one of the primary substances in a living organism, protein defines the character of each cell by interacting with the cellular environment to promote the cell’s growth and function [1]. Previous studies on proteomics indicate that the functions of different proteins could be assigned based upon protein structures [2,3]. The knowledge on protein structures gives us an overview of protein fold space and is helpful for the understanding of the evolutionary principles behind structure. By observing the architectures and topologies of the protein families, biological processes can be investigated more directly with much higher resolution and finer detail. For this reason, the analysis of protein, its structure and the interaction with the other materials is emerging as an important problem in bioinformatics. However, the determination of protein structures is experimentally expensive and time consuming, this makes scientists largely dependent on sequence rather than more general structure to infer the function of the protein at the present time. For this reason, data mining technology is introduced into this area to provide more efficient data processing and knowledge discovery approaches.<br /><br />Unlike many data mining applications which lack available data, the protein structure determination problem and its interaction study, on the contrary, could utilize a vast amount of biologically relevant information on protein and its interaction, such as the protein data bank (PDB) [4], the structural classification of proteins (SCOP) databases [5], CATH databases [6], UniProt [7], and others. The difficulty of predicting protein structures, specially its 3D structures, and the interactions between proteins as shown in Figure 6.1, lies in the computational complexity of the data. Although a large number of approaches have been developed to determine the protein structures such as <i>ab initio</i> modelling [8], homology modelling [9] and threading [10], more efficient and reliable methods are still greatly needed.<br /><br />In this chapter, we will introduce a state-of-the-art data mining technique, <i>graph mining</i>, which is good at defining and discovering interesting structural patterns in graphical data sets, and take advantage of its expressive power to study protein structures, including protein structure prediction and comparison, and protein-protein interaction (PPI). The current graph pattern mining methods will be described, and typical algorithms will be presented, together with their applications in the protein structure analysis.<br /><br />The rest of the chapter is organized as follows: Section 6.2 will give a brief introduction of the fundamental knowledge of protein, the publicly accessible protein data resources and the current research status of protein analysis; in Section 6.3, we will pay attention to one of the state-of-the-art data mining methods, graph mining; then Section 6.4 surveys several existing work for protein structure analysis using advanced graph mining methods in the recent decade; finally, in Section 6.5, a conclusion with potential further work will be summarized.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30034411

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Chapman & Hall/CRC

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30034411/chen-advancedgraphmining-2010.pdf

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30034411/chen-biologicaldatamining-evidence-2010.pdf

Direitos

2010, Chapman & Hall/CRC

Tipo

Book Chapter