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  • Title: Protein-protein interaction prediction based on ordinal regression and recurrent convolutional neural networks.
    Author: Xu W, Gao Y, Wang Y, Guan J.
    Journal: BMC Bioinformatics; 2021 Oct 08; 22(Suppl 6):485. PubMed ID: 34625020.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Protein protein interactions (PPIs) are essential to most of the biological processes. The prediction of PPIs is beneficial to the understanding of protein functions and thus is helpful to pathological analysis, disease diagnosis and drug design etc. As the amount of protein data is growing fast in the post genomic era, high-throughput experimental methods are expensive and time-consuming for the prediction of PPIs. Thus, computational methods have attracted researcher's attention in recent years. A large number of computational methods have been proposed based on different protein sequence encoders. RESULTS: Notably, the confidence score of a protein sequence pair could be regarded as a kind of measurement to PPIs. The higher the confidence score for one protein pair is, the more likely the protein pair interacts. Thus in this paper, a deep learning framework, called ordinal regression and recurrent convolutional neural network (OR-RCNN) method, is introduced to predict PPIs from the perspective of confidence score. It mainly contains two parts: the encoder part of protein sequence pair and the prediction part of PPIs by confidence score. In the first part, two recurrent convolutional neural networks (RCNNs) with shared parameters are applied to construct two protein sequence embedding vectors, which can automatically extract robust local features and sequential information from the protein pairs. Based on it, the two embedding vectors are encoded into one novel embedding vector by element-wise multiplication. By taking the ordinal information behind confidence score into consideration, ordinal regression is used to construct multiple sub-classifiers in the second part. The results of multiple sub-classifiers are aggregated to obtain the final confidence score. Following that, the existence of PPIs is determined by the confidence score. We set a threshold [Formula: see text], and say the interaction exists between the protein pair if its confidence score is bigger than [Formula: see text]. CONCLUSIONS: We applied our method to predict PPIs on data sets S. cerevisiae and Homo sapiens. Through experimental verification, our method outperforms state-of-the-art PPI prediction models.
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