Control of Yeast Filamentous-Form Growth by Modules in an Integrated Molecular Network

Susanne Prinz(Institute for Systems Biology), Iliana Avila-Campillo(Institute for Systems Biology), Christine Aldridge(Institute for Systems Biology), Ajitha Srinivasan(Institute for Systems Biology), Krassen Dimitrov(Institute for Systems Biology), Andrew F. Siegel(University of Washington), Timothy Galitski(Institute for Systems Biology)
Genome Research
March 1, 2004
Cited by 86Open Access
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Abstract

On solid growth media with limiting nitrogen source, diploid budding-yeast cells differentiate from the yeast form to a filamentous, adhesive, and invasive form. Genomic profiles of mRNA levels in Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast-form and filamentous-form cells were compared. Disparate data types, including genes implicated by expression change, filamentation genes known previously through a phenotype, protein-protein interaction data, and protein-metabolite interaction data were integrated as the nodes and edges of a filamentation-network graph. Application of a network-clustering method revealed 47 clusters in the data. The correspondence of the clusters to modules is supported by significant coordinated expression change among cluster co-member genes, and the quantitative identification of collective functions controlling cell properties. The modular abstraction of the filamentation network enables the association of filamentous-form cell properties with the activation or repression of specific biological processes, and suggests hypotheses. A module-derived hypothesis was tested. It was found that the 26S proteasome regulates filamentous-form growth.


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