Predicting protein-protein interactions by a supervised learning classifier

2004 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 291-301 ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (06) ◽  
pp. 1442008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jung-Hsien Chiang ◽  
Jiun-Huang Ju

Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are involved in the majority of biological processes. Identification of PPIs is therefore one of the key aims of biological research. Although there are many databases of PPIs, many other unidentified PPIs could be buried in the biomedical literature. Therefore, automated identification of PPIs from biomedical literature repositories could be used to discover otherwise hidden interactions. Search engines, such as Google, have been successfully applied to measure the relatedness among words. Inspired by such approaches, we propose a novel method to identify PPIs through semantic similarity measures among protein mentions. We define six semantic similarity measures as features based on the page counts retrieved from the MEDLINE database. A machine learning classifier, Random Forest, is trained using the above features. The proposed approach achieve an averaged micro-F of 71.28% and an averaged macro-F of 64.03% over five PPI corpora, an improvement over the results of using only the conventional co-occurrence feature (averaged micro-F of 68.79% and an averaged macro-F of 60.49%). A relation-word reinforcement further improves the averaged micro-F to 71.3% and averaged macro-F to 65.12%. Comparing the results of the current work with other studies on the AIMed corpus (ranging from 77.58% to 85.1% in micro-F, 62.18% to 76.27% in macro-F), we show that the proposed approach achieves micro-F of 81.88% and macro-F of 64.01% without the use of sophisticated feature extraction. Finally, we manually examine the newly discovered PPI pairs based on a literature review, and the results suggest that our approach could extract novel protein–protein interactions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 117693432110500
Author(s):  
Jie Pan ◽  
Li-Ping Li ◽  
Chang-Qing Yu ◽  
Zhu-Hong You ◽  
Yong-Jian Guan ◽  
...  

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) in plants are essential for understanding the regulation of biological processes. Although high-throughput technologies have been widely used to identify PPIs, they are usually laborious, expensive, and suffer from high false-positive rates. Therefore, it is imperative to develop novel computational approaches as a supplement tool to detect PPIs in plants. In this work, we presented a method, namely DST-RoF, to identify PPIs in plants by combining an ensemble learning classifier-Rotation Forest (RoF) with discrete sine transformation (DST). Specifically, plant protein sequence is firstly converted into Position-Specific Scoring Matrix (PSSM). Then, the discrete sine transformation was employed to extract effective features for obtaining the evolutionary information of proteins. Finally, these optimal features were fed into the RoF classifier for training and prediction. When performed on the plant datasets Arabidopsis, Rice, and Maize, DST-RoF yielded high prediction accuracy of 82.95%, 88.82%, and 93.70%, respectively. To further evaluate the prediction ability of our approach, we compared it with 4 state-of-the-art classifiers and 3 different feature extraction methods. Comprehensive experimental results anticipated that our method is feasible and robust for predicting potential plant-protein interacted pairs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 49 (08) ◽  
Author(s):  
LC König ◽  
M Meinhard ◽  
C Sandig ◽  
MH Bender ◽  
A Lovas ◽  
...  

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