4.3 Article

Using molecular functional networks to manifest connections between obesity and obesity-related diseases

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 49, Pages 85136-85149

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.19490

Keywords

bioinformatics; human obesity; obesity-related diseases; protein interaction network; gene expression

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [11171088, 61300120]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province [A2015208108]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei University of Science and Technology [2014PT67]
  4. Educational Commission of Hebei Province on Humanities and Social Sciences [SZ16180]
  5. Science and technology plan project of Hebei Province [15210341]
  6. Research Project of University Libraries in Hebei Province [201503Z]

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Obesity is a primary risk factor for many diseases such as certain cancers. In this study, we have developed three algorithms including a random-walk based method OBNet, a shortest-path based method OBsp and a direct-overlap method OBoverlap, to reveal obesity-disease connections at protein-interaction subnetworks corresponding to thousands of biological functions and pathways. Through literature mining, we also curated an obesity-associated disease list, by which we compared the methods. As a result, OBNet outperforms other two methods. OBNet can predict whether a disease is obesity-related based on its associated genes. Meanwhile, OBNet identifies extensive connections between obesity genes and genes associated with a few diseases at various functional modules and pathways. Using breast cancer and Type 2 diabetes as two examples, OBNet identifies meaningful genes that may play key roles in connecting obesity and the two diseases. For example, TGFB1 and VEGFA are inferred to be the top two key genes mediating obesity-breast cancer connection in modules associated with brain development. Finally, the top modules identified by OBNet in breast cancer significantly overlap with modules identified from TCGA breast cancer gene expression study, revealing the power of OBNet in identifying biological processes involved in the disease.

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