scholarly journals DELPHI: accurate deep ensemble model for protein interaction sites prediction

Author(s):  
Yiwei Li ◽  
G Brian Golding ◽  
Lucian Ilie

Abstract Motivation Proteins usually perform their functions by interacting with other proteins, which is why accurately predicting protein–protein interaction (PPI) binding sites is a fundamental problem. Experimental methods are slow and expensive. Therefore, great efforts are being made towards increasing the performance of computational methods. Results We propose DEep Learning Prediction of Highly probable protein Interaction sites (DELPHI), a new sequence-based deep learning suite for PPI-binding sites prediction. DELPHI has an ensemble structure which combines a CNN and a RNN component with fine tuning technique. Three novel features, HSP, position information and ProtVec are used in addition to nine existing ones. We comprehensively compare DELPHI to nine state-of-the-art programmes on five datasets, and DELPHI outperforms the competing methods in all metrics even though its training dataset shares the least similarities with the testing datasets. In the most important metrics, AUPRC and MCC, it surpasses the second best programmes by as much as 18.5% and 27.7%, respectively. We also demonstrated that the improvement is essentially due to using the ensemble model and, especially, the three new features. Using DELPHI it is shown that there is a strong correlation with protein-binding residues (PBRs) and sites with strong evolutionary conservation. In addition, DELPHI’s predicted PBR sites closely match known data from Pfam. DELPHI is available as open-sourced standalone software and web server. Availability and implementation The DELPHI web server can be found at delphi.csd.uwo.ca/, with all datasets and results in this study. The trained models, the DELPHI standalone source code, and the feature computation pipeline are freely available at github.com/lucian-ilie/DELPHI. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Author(s):  
Yiwei Li ◽  
Lucian Ilie

AbstractMotivationProteins usually perform their functions by interacting with other proteins, which is why accurately predicting protein-protein interaction (PPI) binding sites is a fundamental problem. Experimental methods are slow and expensive. Therefore, great efforts are being made towards increasing the performance of computational methods.ResultsWe propose DELPHI (DEep Learning Prediction of Highly probable protein Interaction sites), a new sequence-based deep learning suite for PPI binding sites prediction. DELPHI has an ensemble structure with data augmentation and it employs novel features in addition to existing ones. We comprehensively compare DELPHI to nine state-of-the-art programs on five datasets and show that it is more accurate.AvailabilityThe trained model, source code for training, predicting, and data processing are freely available at https://github.com/lucian-ilie/DELPHI. All datasets used in this study can be downloaded at http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~ilie/DELPHI/[email protected]


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Wang ◽  
Guiyang Zhang ◽  
Zu-Guo Yu ◽  
Guohua Huang

Knowledge about protein-protein interactions is beneficial in understanding cellular mechanisms. Protein-protein interactions are usually determined according to their protein-protein interaction sites. Due to the limitations of current techniques, it is still a challenging task to detect protein-protein interaction sites. In this article, we presented a method based on deep learning and XGBoost (called DeepPPISP-XGB) for predicting protein-protein interaction sites. The deep learning model served as a feature extractor to remove redundant information from protein sequences. The Extreme Gradient Boosting algorithm was used to construct a classifier for predicting protein-protein interaction sites. The DeepPPISP-XGB achieved the following results: area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.681, a recall of 0.624, and area under the precision-recall curve of 0.339, being competitive with the state-of-the-art methods. We also validated the positive role of global features in predicting protein-protein interaction sites.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (14) ◽  
pp. 2395-2402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoying Wang ◽  
Bin Yu ◽  
Anjun Ma ◽  
Cheng Chen ◽  
Bingqiang Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Motivation The prediction of protein–protein interaction (PPI) sites is a key to mutation design, catalytic reaction and the reconstruction of PPI networks. It is a challenging task considering the significant abundant sequences and the imbalance issue in samples. Results A new ensemble learning-based method, Ensemble Learning of synthetic minority oversampling technique (SMOTE) for Unbalancing samples and RF algorithm (EL-SMURF), was proposed for PPI sites prediction in this study. The sequence profile feature and the residue evolution rates were combined for feature extraction of neighboring residues using a sliding window, and the SMOTE was applied to oversample interface residues in the feature space for the imbalance problem. The Multi-dimensional Scaling feature selection method was implemented to reduce feature redundancy and subset selection. Finally, the Random Forest classifiers were applied to build the ensemble learning model, and the optimal feature vectors were inserted into EL-SMURF to predict PPI sites. The performance validation of EL-SMURF on two independent validation datasets showed 77.1% and 77.7% accuracy, which were 6.2–15.7% and 6.1–18.9% higher than the other existing tools, respectively. Availability and implementation The source codes and data used in this study are publicly available at http://github.com/QUST-AIBBDRC/EL-SMURF/. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


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