4.4 Article

Minimum steering node set of complex networks and its applications to biomolecular networks

Journal

IET SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 116-123

Publisher

INST ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY-IET
DOI: 10.1049/iet-syb.2015.0077

Keywords

molecular biophysics; biocontrol; graph theory; graph-theoretic algorithm; MSS; minimum driver node sets; structural controllability; network dynamics; network controllability; biological systems; biomolecular networks; complex networks; minimum steering node set

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61428209]
  3. Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC)

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Many systems of interests in practices can be represented as complex networks. For biological systems, biomolecules do not perform their functions alone but interact with each other to form so-called biomolecular networks. A system is said to be controllable if it can be steered from any initial state to any other final state in finite time. The network controllability has become essential to study the dynamics of the networks and understand the importance of individual nodes in the networks. Some interesting biological phenomena have been discovered in terms of the structural controllability of biomolecular networks. Most of current studies investigate the structural controllability of networks in notion of the minimum driver node sets (MDSs). In this study, the authors analyse the network structural controllability in notion of the minimum steering node sets (MSSs). They first develop a graph-theoretic algorithm to identify the MSS for a given network and then apply it to several biomolecular networks. Application results show that biomolecules identified in the MSSs play essential roles in corresponding biological processes. Furthermore, the application results indicate that the MSSs can reflect the network dynamics and node importance in controlling the networks better than the MDSs.

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