The impact of cellular networks on disease comorbidity

Authors: J. Park, D. S. Lee, N. A. Christakis, A.-L. Barabási

Publication Date: January 1, 2009

Journal: Molecular Systems Biology 5:262, 1-7 (2009)

The impact of disease-causing defects is often not limited to the products of a mutated gene but, thanks to interactions between the molecular components, may also affect other cellular functions, resulting in potential comorbidity effects. By combining information on cellular interactions, disease--gene associations, and population-level disease patterns extracted from Medicare data, we find statistically significant correlations between the underlying structure of cellular networks and disease comorbidity patterns in the human population. Our results indicate that such a combination of population-level data and cellular network information could help build novel hypotheses about disease mechanisms.

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A dynamic network approach for the study of human phenotypes

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The implications of human metabolic network topology for disease comorbidity