Publication:
Identifying Ordinal Nature Inherited Proteins Associated with a Certain Disease

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Article

Date

2022-10-07

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Faculty of Humanities and Sciences, SLIIT

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Abstract

Proteomic studies are studies of protein expression levels. They are growing swiftly with the steady improvement in technology and knowledge of cell biology. Since differentially expressed proteins have an influence on overall cell functionality, this improves discrimination between healthy and diseased states. Identifying prime proteins offers prospective insights for developing optimized and targeted treatments. This research involves analyzing data from an early-stage study of which the main purpose was to identify differentially expressed proteins. There are three progressively serious disease states (healthy to mild to severe) in this study. The analysis can be categorized into 2 stages as univariate and multi-protein analysis. The approach of the univariate analysis was to implement continuation ratio modeling considering one protein at a time to pick those that exhibit potential ordinality. Penalized continuation ratio modeling using lasso regularization incorporated with bootstrapping proteins was performed as the next stage to identify protein combinations that perform well together. Combining results of the univariate and multi-protein analyses identified 20 proteins that join forces to discriminate disease severity with an ordinal setting and 21 proteins that are effective each on its own.

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Bootstrapping, Lasso regularization, Ordinal nature, Proteomic studies, Trend tests

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