Genetic Co-Occurrence Network across Sequenced Microbes
Pan-Jun Kim, Nathan D. Price

TL;DR
This study constructs a comprehensive gene co-occurrence network across bacteria, revealing functional modules and interactions that inform evolutionary biology and synthetic gene design.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to identify gene associations, distinguishing between correlogs and anti-correlogs, and demonstrates their relevance across diverse microbial genomes.
Findings
Correlogous gene associations are enriched for physical interactions and co-expression.
Gene modules are interconnected through anti-correlogous relationships.
The approach effectively predicts functional coupling across diverse microbial communities.
Abstract
The phenotype of any organism on earth is, in large part, the consequence of interplay between numerous gene products encoded in the genome, and such interplay between gene products affects the evolutionary fate of the genome itself through the resulting phenotype. In this regard, contemporary genomes can be used as molecular records that reveal associations of various genes working in their natural lifestyles. By analyzing thousands of orthologs across ~600 bacterial species, we constructed a map of gene-gene co-occurrence across much of the sequenced biome. If genes preferentially co-occur in the same organisms, they were called herein correlogs; in the opposite case, called anti-correlogs. To quantify correlogy and anti-correlogy, we alleviated the contribution of indirect correlations between genes by adapting ideas developed for reverse engineering of transcriptional regulatory…
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