Difference between revisions of "Research"

From Bioinformatics Lab
Jump to: navigation, search
(Collaborators)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
*[http://www.marcottelab.org/index.php/Main_Page Edward Marcotte, University of Texas at Austin, USA]
 
*[http://www.marcottelab.org/index.php/Main_Page Edward Marcotte, University of Texas at Austin, USA]
 
*[http://www.crg.es/ben_lehner Ben Lehner, Systems Biology Unit, EMBL-CRG, Spain]
 
*[http://www.crg.es/ben_lehner Ben Lehner, Systems Biology Unit, EMBL-CRG, Spain]
 +
*Dongryul Lee, CHA Medical Center, Korea
 +
*Dongwook Han Kunkook University, Korea
 
*Jonghoon Kim, Korea University, Korea
 
*Jonghoon Kim, Korea University, Korea
  

Revision as of 20:56, 27 October 2015

Research Summary

Word Cloud from Abstraction below publications
The ultimate goal of biological research is to manipulate traits that are important for medicine, agriculture, and bio-industry. This challenging task first requires good understanding of association between genotype and phenotype. Because of high complexity of genotype as well as phenotype, complexity of the genotype-phenotype association could be even untouchable by combinatorial explosion of the number of possible associations. Therefore, modern genetics needs to be more systematic and predictive. Recently we proposed network-guided approach for genetics of complex traits. First, we construct probabilistic functional gene networks for cells or organisms by benchmarking and integrating heterogeneous multi-omics data that are in general publicly available. Then, using guilt-by-association, and other algorithms of network propagation of known biological information, we predict gene functions, phenotypic effect of loss-of-function, and epistatic interaction. The information can contribute to reconstruction of map between genotype and phenotype. The network-guided genetics method has been effectively applied for various organisms; from simple microbe yeast, to multicellular animal C. elegans, to the reference plant Arabidopsis, to the reference crop rice, and to the human.

Research Highlight

Collaborators

Human/Animal Systems Biology

Crop/Plant Systems Biology

Microbial Systems Biology

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox