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Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory

Understanding cattle metabolism and its relationship with milk products is important in bovine breeding. A systemic view could lead to consequences that will result in a better understanding of existing concepts. Topological indices and quantitative characterizations mostly result from the applicati...

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Autores principales: Ghorbani, Sholeh, Tahmoorespur, Mojtaba, Masoudi Nejad, Ali, Nasiri, Mohammad, Asgari, Yazdan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shiraz University 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5019301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27844001
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author Ghorbani, Sholeh
Tahmoorespur, Mojtaba
Masoudi Nejad, Ali
Nasiri, Mohammad
Asgari, Yazdan
author_facet Ghorbani, Sholeh
Tahmoorespur, Mojtaba
Masoudi Nejad, Ali
Nasiri, Mohammad
Asgari, Yazdan
author_sort Ghorbani, Sholeh
collection PubMed
description Understanding cattle metabolism and its relationship with milk products is important in bovine breeding. A systemic view could lead to consequences that will result in a better understanding of existing concepts. Topological indices and quantitative characterizations mostly result from the application of graph theory on biological data. In the present work, the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production was reconstructed and analyzed based on available bovine genome information using several public datasets (NCBI, Uniprot, KEGG, and Brenda). The reconstructed network consisted of 3605 reactions named by KEGG compound numbers and 646 enzymes that catalyzed the corresponding reactions. The characteristics of the directed and undirected network were analyzed using Graph Theory. The mean path length was calculated to be4.39 and 5.41 for directed and undirected networks, respectively. The top 11 hub enzymes whose abnormality could harm bovine health and reduce milk production were determined. Therefore, the aim of constructing the enzyme centric network was twofold; first to find out whether such network followed the same properties of other biological networks, and second, to find the key enzymes. The results of the present study can improve our understanding of milk production in cattle. Also, analysis of the enzyme network can help improve the modeling and simulation of biological systems and help design desired phenotypes to increase milk production quality or quantity.
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spelling pubmed-50193012016-11-14 Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory Ghorbani, Sholeh Tahmoorespur, Mojtaba Masoudi Nejad, Ali Nasiri, Mohammad Asgari, Yazdan Mol Biol Res Commun Original Article Understanding cattle metabolism and its relationship with milk products is important in bovine breeding. A systemic view could lead to consequences that will result in a better understanding of existing concepts. Topological indices and quantitative characterizations mostly result from the application of graph theory on biological data. In the present work, the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production was reconstructed and analyzed based on available bovine genome information using several public datasets (NCBI, Uniprot, KEGG, and Brenda). The reconstructed network consisted of 3605 reactions named by KEGG compound numbers and 646 enzymes that catalyzed the corresponding reactions. The characteristics of the directed and undirected network were analyzed using Graph Theory. The mean path length was calculated to be4.39 and 5.41 for directed and undirected networks, respectively. The top 11 hub enzymes whose abnormality could harm bovine health and reduce milk production were determined. Therefore, the aim of constructing the enzyme centric network was twofold; first to find out whether such network followed the same properties of other biological networks, and second, to find the key enzymes. The results of the present study can improve our understanding of milk production in cattle. Also, analysis of the enzyme network can help improve the modeling and simulation of biological systems and help design desired phenotypes to increase milk production quality or quantity. Shiraz University 2015-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5019301/ /pubmed/27844001 Text en This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Ghorbani, Sholeh
Tahmoorespur, Mojtaba
Masoudi Nejad, Ali
Nasiri, Mohammad
Asgari, Yazdan
Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title_full Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title_fullStr Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title_short Analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
title_sort analysis of the enzyme network involved in cattle milk production using graph theory
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5019301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27844001
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