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    PLoS Genet. 2007 Jun;3(6):e96.

    Network-based analysis of affected biological processes in type 2 diabetes models.

    Liu M, Liberzon A, Kong SW, Lai WR, Park PJ, Kohane IS, Kasif S.

    Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America. manwayl@bu.edu

    Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a complex disorder associated with multiple genetic, epigenetic, developmental, and environmental factors. Animal models of type 2 diabetes differ based on diet, drug treatment, and gene knockouts, and yet all display the clinical hallmarks of hyperglycemia and insulin resistance in peripheral tissue. The recent advances in gene-expression microarray technologies present an unprecedented opportunity to study type 2 diabetes mellitus at a genome-wide scale and across different models. To date, a key challenge has been to identify the biological processes or signaling pathways that play significant roles in the disorder. Here, using a network-based analysis methodology, we identified two sets of genes, associated with insulin signaling and a network of nuclear receptors, which are recurrent in a statistically significant number of diabetes and insulin resistance models and transcriptionally altered across diverse tissue types. We additionally identified a network of protein-protein interactions between members from the two gene sets that may facilitate signaling between them. Taken together, the results illustrate the benefits of integrating high-throughput microarray studies, together with protein-protein interaction networks, in elucidating the underlying biological processes associated with a complex disorder.

    PMID: 17571924 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1904360

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