question on visANT after WGCNA
1
0
Entering edit mode
@agattorosso-9120
Last seen 8.7 years ago
Netherlands

Hallo,

 

I’m using visANT for the first time, after performing a WGCNA. I managed to obtain modules that seem to be related to our disease of interest, and I created files to export to visANT. I have a beginner question on something I’m doing in visANT: I would like to hear if what I’m doing is acceptable to get trustable hub genes from my modules. I will explain what I do: after importing the module and having the node sizes adjusted and the layout set to elegant relaxed, I get a very dense net of edges. So I use the edge weight cut off function and increase the lowest value from 0 to one that gets me a -by eye- reasonable number of hub genes. When going to Topology>>global statistics>>degree distribution I get then a graph with red dots and a correlation value, from which I select the ones with more connections, on the right part of the graph. Does all this make sense? Or should I use a more strict approach? Thank you in advance for any comment,

Angela

wgcna visant module hub genes • 2.7k views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
etycksen • 0
@etycksen-9714
Last seen 8.8 years ago

I like to filter the visAnt module by edge weight in a similar way you do by simply increasing the stringency until all edges disappear.  Once they all disappear, I then step the filter down one step and then create a node from the sub-network.  I then change the layout to the spoke layout so that the hub gene is in the center.  I then incrementally step down the filter stringency and generate more nodes connected to the previous nodes to create a edge weight based interaction map.  I then GO annotate the nodes to find putative functions.  You can then add fold-change data to the genes and overlay KEGG graphs to try and make informed biological interpretations on the data.  I don't know if anyone else does it this way, but this is what I have been doing.  I'm open to other ways of going about using visANT and I'm glad you brought this up.

 

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 488 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6