4.6 Review

Estimation of Gene Regulatory Networks from Cancer Transcriptomics Data

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr9101758

Keywords

cancer; transcriptomics; gene regulatory network

Funding

  1. Gachon University Gil Medical Center [FRD2020-04-02, FRD2020-08]

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This review introduces various methods for inferring gene regulatory networks in cancer research, including pair-wise measures, multivariate measures, and supervised integrative approaches. Most methods are not specifically designed for cancer transcriptome data, indicating the need for a better understanding of cancer pathophysiology and the development of more systematic validation methods in the context of cancer biology.
Cancer is a genetic disease in which multiple genes are perturbed. Thus, information about the regulatory relationships between genes is necessary for the identification of biomarkers and therapeutic targets. In this review, methods for inference of gene regulatory networks (GRNs) from transcriptomics data that are used in cancer research are introduced. The methods are classified into three categories according to the analysis model. The first category includes methods that use pair-wise measures between genes, including correlation coefficient and mutual information. The second category includes methods that determine the genetic regulatory relationship using multivariate measures, which consider the expression profiles of all genes concurrently. The third category includes methods using supervised and integrative approaches. The supervised approach estimates the regulatory relationship using a supervised learning method that constructs a regression or classification model for predicting whether there is a regulatory relationship between genes with input data of gene expression profiles and class labels of prior biological knowledge. The integrative method is an expansion of the supervised method and uses more data and biological knowledge for predicting the regulatory relationship. Furthermore, simulation and experimental validation of the estimated GRNs are also discussed in this review. This review identified that most GRN inference methods are not specific for cancer transcriptome data, and such methods are required for better understanding of cancer pathophysiology. In addition, more systematic methods for validation of the estimated GRNs need to be developed in the context of cancer biology.

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