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Abstract

Motivation: MicroRNAs are small endogenous RNAs that can play important regulatory roles via the RNA-interference pathway by targeting mRNAs for cleavage or translational repression. We propose a computational method to predict miRNA regulatory modules or groups of miRNAs and target genes that are believed to participate cooperatively in post-transcriptional gene regulation. Results: We tested our method with the human genes and miRNAs, predicting 431 miRNA regulatory modules. We analyze a module with genes: BTG2, WT1, PPM1D, PAK7 and RAB9B, and miRNAs: miR15a and miR-16. Review of the literature and annotation with Gene Ontology terms reveal that the roles of these genes can indeed be closely related in specific biological processes, such as gene regulation involved in breast, renal, and prostate cancers. Furthermore, it has been reported that miR-15a and miR-16 are deleted together in certain types of cancer, suggesting a possible connection between these miRNAs and cancers. Given that most known functionalities of miRNAs are related to negative gene regulation, extending our approach and exploiting the insight thus obtained may provide clues to achieving practical accuracy in the reverse-engineering of gene regulatory networks. Availability: A list of predicted modules is available from the authors upon request.

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