multiscale modelling
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Multiscale ModellingProject Fallot
Tariq Abdulla December 2009
Outline• Information Modelling – Ontologies, XML and
databases• Petri nets – graph based representation of
networks and pathways• Network Analysis – network type, motifs• Integration of models
Ontologies
1. Provide a common, structured vocabulary, in order to overcome confusion in terminology.
2. Facilitate the integration and querying of heterogeneous datasets (and, increasingly, models).
Gene Ontology1. Collaboration between model organism databases –
thus inherently cross-species
2. Reference ontology – for more specific annotation, we may develop application ontologies, that reference GO and other reference ontologies
3. Split into 3 seperate ontologies: Biological Process, Cellular Component and Molecular Function
Gene Ontology: AmiGO
Gene Ontology: AmiGO
Rat Genome DatabaseNkx2.5
Rat Genome DatabaseJagged1
Properties
Irreflexive
Functional
Reflexive
Transitive
Inverse Functional
Symmetric
(Horridge et al. 2009)
Properties
Automatic Classification
Automatic Classification
place
transition
arcinhibitory arctoken
Petri Nets
3
t2
t1
t3
p1
p3
p4
p2
(Gilbert, et al. 2006)
vmax = Kcat[E]
SBML – Enzyme Reaction
KEGG Representation
Is this straightforward?
(Heiner, Koch and Will 2004)
(Heiner, Koch and Will 2004)
Pathways: structural differences
Metabolic Networks Signal Transduction Networks
(Breitling, et al. 2008)
Phosphorylation
Kinase
PhosphorylatedForm
Phosphotase
Signalling Protein
Notch Signalling
(Artavanis-Tsakonas, Rand and Lake 1999)
Hybrid Petri Nets
• Places and Transitions can be either discrete or continuous
HFPN: Notch Signalling
HFPN: Notch Signalling
XML Representation of HFPN
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE hybridFunctionalPetriNet SYSTEM "SampleHFPNet.dtd"><HFPN> <place id="P1" type="continuos" variableName="m1"/> <place id="P2" type="continuos" variableName="m2"/> <transition id="T1" speedFunction="m1/2.5" type="continuos"/> <arc from="P1" to="T1" type="normal" weight="1"/> <arc from="T1" to="P2" type="normal" weight="m1/2"/></HFPN>
m1 m2
T1
1 m1/2P1 P2
m1/2.5
How Can we understand this?
Network Analysis!
Signalling Pathways are robust because:
• They are small world, scale free networks
Power Law Distribution: P(k) k∼ −γ
Signalling Pathways are robust because:
• There are redundant pathways, feedback loops, and combinatorial complex
• Cross-talk between pathways provide additional sites to regulate signalling
Network Motifs
Network Motifs
(Prill, Iglesias and Levchenko 2005)
Model Checking
• Liveness• Reachability• P and T invariants
Mining Pathway Information
• Pathway databases are either created by curators, or through text mining of the literature
• Curated databases tend to be higher quality, but the breadth may be narrower
Levels of Abstraction
Why model?
• Generate new insights• Make testable predictions• Test conditions that may be difficult/impossible to
study in vitro / in vivo• Rule out particular explanations for an experimental
observation• Help identify what is right/wrong with an hypothesis
Analysis and Interpretation
• Validation: do the model results match experimental data?
• Prediction: – Sensitivity analysis– Knockout experiments
Information Management• Identify building blocks / submodels• Database
– Models, model components– Behaviours– Properties
• Component reuse• Version control• Model checking
– Maintaining temporal-logical properties
A Proposition:
• Find out the expression of Delta and Notch in the precursor cells of the Heart fields at an early stage
• Simulate to find if the patterning corresponds to what is expected
Conclusion• By encoding models, literature and experimental
results in XML, and storing them in web-accessible databases, intermediated by ontologies, we facilitate more holistic approaches.
• A range of modelling are appropriate to different levels of scale
• In the places where these can begin to be integrated, there is insight to be gained in silico
ReferencesHorridge, Matthew, Simon Jupp, Georgina Moulton, Alan Rector, Robert Stevens, and Chris Wroe. "A Practical Guide To Building OWL Ontologies Using Protégé 4." CO-ODE. October 16, 2007. http://www.co-ode.org/resources/tutorials/ProtegeOWLTutorial.pdf
Gilbert, David, et al. "Computational methodologies for modelling, analysis and simulation of signalling networks." Breifings in Bioinformatics 7, no. 4 (2006): 339-353.
Heiner, Monika, Ina Koch, and Jürgen Will. "Model validation of biological pathways using Petri nets—demonstrated for apoptosis." Biosystems 75 (2004): 15-28.
Breitling, Rainer, David Gilbert, Monika Heiner, and Richard Orton. "A structured approach for the engineering of biochemical network models, illustrated for signaling pathways." Briefings in Bioinformatics 9, no. 5 (2008): 404-421.
Matsuno, Hiroshi, Ryutaro Murakami, Rie Yamane, Naoyuki Yamasaki, Sachie Fujita, and Haruka Yoshimori. "Boundary Formation by Notch Signalling in Drosophila Multicellular Systems: Experimental Observations and Gene Network Modeling by Genomic Object Net." Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing. Kauai, Hawaii: World Scientific, 2003. 152-163.
Artavanis-Tsakonas, Spyros, Matthew D. Rand, and Robert J. Lake. "Notch Signaling: Cell Fate Control and Signal Integration in Development." Science 284 (1999): 770-776.
Prill, Rober J., Pablo A. Iglesias, and Andre Levchenko. "Dynamic Properties of Network Motifs Contribute to Biological Network Organization." PLOS Biology 3, no. 11 (2005): 1881-1892.
Further ReadingFisher, Steven A., Lowell B. Langille, and Deepak Srivastava. "Apoptosis During Cardiovascular Development." Circulation Research, 2000: 856-864.
Gittenberger-de Groot, A. C., and R. E. Poelmann. "A Subpopulation of Apoptosis-Prone Cardiac Neural Crest Cells Targets to the Venous Pole: Multiple Functions in Heart Development?" Developmental Biology, 1999: 271-286.
Barabási, Albert-László, and Zoltán N. Oltvai. "Network Biology: Understanding the Cell’s Functional Organization." Nature Reviews: Genetics, 2004: 101-113.
Rector, Alan, Jeremy Rogers, and Thomas Bittner. "Granularity scale and collectivity: when size does and does not matter." Journal of Biomedical Informatics, no. 39 (2006): 333-349.
Fisher, Jasmin, and Thomas A Henzinger. "Executable cell biology." NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY 25, no. 11 (2007): 1239-1249.
Novere, Nicholas Le, Melanie Courtot, and Camille Laibe. "Adding Semantics in Kinetics Models of Biochemical Pathways." 2nd International ESCEC Symposium on Experimental Standard Conditions on Enzyme Characterizations. Rhein: Beilstein Institut, 2006. 137-153.
Niessen, Kyle, and Aly Karsan. "Notch Signalling in Cardiac Development." Circulation Research, 2008: 1169-1181.
Walker D C, Southgate J S, Hill G, Holcombe M, Hose D R, Wood S M, MacNeil S and Smallwood R H (2004) The Epitheliome: modelling the social behaviour of cells. BioSystems 76:89-100
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