Repository logo
Collections
Browse
Statistics
  • English
  • हिंदी
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Journal Article
  4. Network controllability analysis of intracellular signalling reveals viruses are actively controlling molecular systems

Publication:
Network controllability analysis of intracellular signalling reveals viruses are actively controlling molecular systems

Date

14-02-2019

Authors

Ravindran, Vandana
Nacher, Jose C
Akutsu, Tatsuya
Ishitsuka, Masayuki
Osadcenco, Adrian
V, SunithaORCID 0000-0003-2348-8742
Bagler, Ganesh
Schwartz, Jean-Marc
Robertson, David L

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Scientific Reports

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

In recent years control theory has been applied to biological systems with the aim of identifying the minimum set of molecular interactions that can drive the network to a required state. However, in an intra-cellular network it is unclear how control can be achieved in practice. To address this limitation we use viral infection, specifically human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and hepatitis C virus (HCV), as a paradigm to model control of an infected cell. Using a large human signalling network comprised of over 6000 human proteins and more than 34000 directed interactions, we compared two states: normal/uninfected and infected. Our network controllability analysis demonstrates how a virus efficiently brings the dynamically organised host system into its control by mostly targeting existing critical control nodes, requiring fewer nodes than in the uninfected network. The lower number of control nodes is presumably to optimise exploitation of specific sub-systems needed for virus replication and/or involved in the host response to infection. Viral infection of the human system also permits discrimination between available network-control models, which demonstrates that the minimum dominating set (MDS) method better accounts for how the biological information and signals are organised during infection by identifying most viral proteins as critical driver nodes compared to the maximum matching (MM) method. Furthermore, the host driver nodes identified by MDS are distributed throughout the pathways enabling effective control of the cell via the high 'control centrality' of the viral and targeted host nodes. Our results demonstrate that control theory gives a more complete and dynamic understanding of virus exploitation of the host system when compared with previous analyses limited to static single-state networks.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Vandana Ravindran, Jose C. Nacher, Tatsuya Akutsu, Masayuki Ishitsuka, Adrian Osadcenco, V Sunitha, Bagler, Ganesh, Jean-Marc Schwartz, and David L. Robertson, "Network controllability analysis of intracellular signalling reveals viruses are actively controlling molecular systems," Scientific Reports, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 2066. Doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-38224-9

URI

https://ir.daiict.ac.in/handle/dau.ir/1991

Collections

Journal Article

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Full item page

Research Impact

Metrics powered by PlumX, Altmetric and Dimensions

 
Quick Links
  • Home
  • Search
  • Research Overview
  • About
Contact

DAU, Gandhinagar, India

library@dau.ac.in

+91 0796-8261-578

Follow Us

© 2025 Dhirubhai Ambani University
Designed by Library Team