English

Algebraic Experimental Design: Theory and Computation

Algebraic Geometry 2024-11-19 v1 Molecular Networks

Abstract

Over the past several decades, algebraic geometry has provided innovative approaches to biological experimental design that resolved theoretical questions and improved computational efficiency. However, guaranteeing uniqueness and perfect recovery of models are still open problems. In this work we study the problem of uniqueness of wiring diagrams. We use as a modeling framework polynomial dynamical systems and utilize the correspondence between simplicial complexes and square-free monomial ideals from Stanley-Reisner theory to develop theory and construct an algorithm for identifying input data sets VFpnV\subset \mathbb F_p^n that are guaranteed to correspond to a unique minimal wiring diagram regardless of the experimental output. We apply the results on a tumor-suppression network mediated by epidermal derived growth factor receptor and demonstrate how careful experimental design decisions can lead to a unique minimal wiring diagram identification. One of the insights of the theoretical work is the connection between the uniqueness of a wiring diagram for a given VFpnV\subset \mathbb F_p^n and the uniqueness of the reduced Gr\"obner basis of the polynomial ideal I(V)Fp[x1,,xn]I(V)\subset \mathbb F_p[x_1,\ldots, x_n]. We discuss existing results and introduce a new necessary condition on the points in VV for uniqueness of the reduced Gr\"obner basis of I(V)I(V). These results also point to the importance of the relative proximity of the experimental input points on the number of minimal wiring diagrams, which we then study computationally. We find that there is a concrete heuristic way to generate data that tends to result in fewer minimal wiring diagrams.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2208.02726,
  title  = {Algebraic Experimental Design: Theory and Computation},
  author = {Elena S. Dimitrova and Cameron H. Fredrickson and Nicholas A. Rondoni and Brandilyn Stigler and Alan Veliz-Cuba},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.02726},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

16 pages, 2 figures (one in color but prints well in b&w), 2 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-25T01:29:05.649Z