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Bayesian inference of distributed time delay in transcriptional and translational regulation

Authors
Choi, BoseungCheng, Yu-YuCinar, SelahattinOtt, WilliamBennett, Matthew R.Josic, KresimirKim, Jae Kyoung
Issue Date
15-1월-2020
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Citation
BIOINFORMATICS, v.36, no.2, pp.586 - 593
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BIOINFORMATICS
Volume
36
Number
2
Start Page
586
End Page
593
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/58299
DOI
10.1093/bioinformatics/btz574
ISSN
1367-4803
Abstract
Motivation: Advances in experimental and imaging techniques have allowed for unprecedented insights into the dynamical processes within individual cells. However, many facets of intracellular dynamics remain hidden, or can be measured only indirectly. This makes it challenging to reconstruct the regulatory networks that govern the biochemical processes underlying various cell functions. Current estimation techniques for inferring reaction rates frequently rely on marginalization over unobserved processes and states. Even in simple systems this approach can be computationally challenging, and can lead to large uncertainties and lack of robustness in parameter estimates. Therefore we will require alternative approaches to efficiently uncover the interactions in complex biochemical networks. Results: We propose a Bayesian inference framework based on replacing uninteresting or unobserved reactions with time delays. Although the resulting models are non-Markovian, recent results on stochastic systems with random delays allow us to rigorously obtain expressions for the likelihoods of model parameters. In turn, this allows us to extend MCMC methods to efficiently estimate reaction rates, and delay distribution parameters, from single-cell assays. We illustrate the advantages, and potential pitfalls, of the approach using a birth-death model with both synthetic and experimental data, and show that we can robustly infer model parameters using a relatively small number of measurements. We demonstrate how to do so even when only the relative molecule count within the cell is measured, as in the case of fluorescence microscopy.
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