Litcius/Paper detail

Hodge theory-based biomolecular data analysis

Ronald Koh Joon Wei, JunJie Wee, Valerie Evangelin Laurent, Kelin Xia

2022Scientific Reports18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hodge theory reveals the deep intrinsic relations of differential forms and provides a bridge between differential geometry, algebraic topology, and functional analysis. Here we use Hodge Laplacian and Hodge decomposition models to analyze biomolecular structures. Different from traditional graph-based methods, biomolecular structures are represented as simplicial complexes, which can be viewed as a generalization of graph models to their higher-dimensional counterparts. Hodge Laplacian matrices at different dimensions can be generated from the simplicial complex. The spectral information of these matrices can be used to study intrinsic topological information of biomolecular structures. Essentially, the number (or multiplicity) of k-th dimensional zero eigenvalues is equivalent to the k-th Betti number, i.e., the number of k-th dimensional homology groups. The associated eigenvectors indicate the homological generators, i.e., circles or holes within the molecular-based simplicial complex. Furthermore, Hodge decomposition-based HodgeRank model is used to characterize the folding or compactness of the molecular structures, in particular, the topological associated domain (TAD) in high-throughput chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) data. Mathematically, molecular structures are represented in simplicial complexes with certain edge flows. The HodgeRank-based average/total inconsistency (AI/TI) is used for the quantitative measurements of the folding or compactness of TADs. This is the first quantitative measurement for TAD regions, as far as we know.

Topics & Concepts

Betti numberMathematicsTopology (electrical circuits)Simplicial manifoldSimplicial homologyEigenvalues and eigenvectorsHomology (biology)Simplicial complexFolding (DSP implementation)Laplace operatorSimplicial setPure mathematicsCombinatoricsPhysicsMathematical analysisChemistryGeneElectrical engineeringHomotopyHomotopy categoryEngineeringQuantum mechanicsBiochemistryGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsTopological and Geometric Data AnalysisBioinformatics and Genomic Networks