TY - JOUR
T1 - An Efficient Computational Model for Large-Scale Prediction of Protein–Protein Interactions Based on Accurate and Scalable Graph Embedding
AU - Su, Xiao Rui
AU - You, Zhu Hong
AU - Hu, Lun
AU - Huang, Yu An
AU - Wang, Yi
AU - Yi, Hai Cheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Su, You, Hu, Huang, Wang and Yi.
PY - 2021/2/26
Y1 - 2021/2/26
N2 - Protein–protein interaction (PPI) is the basis of the whole molecular mechanisms of living cells. Although traditional experiments are able to detect PPIs accurately, they often encounter high cost and require more time. As a result, computational methods have been used to predict PPIs to avoid these problems. Graph structure, as the important and pervasive data carriers, is considered as the most suitable structure to present biomedical entities and relationships. Although graph embedding is the most popular approach for graph representation learning, it usually suffers from high computational and space cost, especially in large-scale graphs. Therefore, developing a framework, which can accelerate graph embedding and improve the accuracy of embedding results, is important to large-scale PPIs prediction. In this paper, we propose a multi-level model LPPI to improve both the quality and speed of large-scale PPIs prediction. Firstly, protein basic information is collected as its attribute, including positional gene sets, motif gene sets, and immunological signatures. Secondly, we construct a weighted graph by using protein attributes to calculate node similarity. Then GraphZoom is used to accelerate the embedding process by reducing the size of the weighted graph. Next, graph embedding methods are used to learn graph topology features from the reconstructed graph. Finally, the linear Logistic Regression (LR) model is used to predict the probability of interactions of two proteins. LPPI achieved a high accuracy of 0.99997 and 0.9979 on the PPI network dataset and GraphSAGE-PPI dataset, respectively. Our further results show that the LPPI is promising for large-scale PPI prediction in both accuracy and efficiency, which is beneficial to other large-scale biomedical molecules interactions detection.
AB - Protein–protein interaction (PPI) is the basis of the whole molecular mechanisms of living cells. Although traditional experiments are able to detect PPIs accurately, they often encounter high cost and require more time. As a result, computational methods have been used to predict PPIs to avoid these problems. Graph structure, as the important and pervasive data carriers, is considered as the most suitable structure to present biomedical entities and relationships. Although graph embedding is the most popular approach for graph representation learning, it usually suffers from high computational and space cost, especially in large-scale graphs. Therefore, developing a framework, which can accelerate graph embedding and improve the accuracy of embedding results, is important to large-scale PPIs prediction. In this paper, we propose a multi-level model LPPI to improve both the quality and speed of large-scale PPIs prediction. Firstly, protein basic information is collected as its attribute, including positional gene sets, motif gene sets, and immunological signatures. Secondly, we construct a weighted graph by using protein attributes to calculate node similarity. Then GraphZoom is used to accelerate the embedding process by reducing the size of the weighted graph. Next, graph embedding methods are used to learn graph topology features from the reconstructed graph. Finally, the linear Logistic Regression (LR) model is used to predict the probability of interactions of two proteins. LPPI achieved a high accuracy of 0.99997 and 0.9979 on the PPI network dataset and GraphSAGE-PPI dataset, respectively. Our further results show that the LPPI is promising for large-scale PPI prediction in both accuracy and efficiency, which is beneficial to other large-scale biomedical molecules interactions detection.
KW - graph embedding
KW - GraphZoom
KW - large-scale
KW - protein-protein interaction
KW - weighted graph
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85102569241&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fgene.2021.635451
DO - 10.3389/fgene.2021.635451
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85102569241
SN - 1664-8021
VL - 12
JO - Frontiers in Genetics
JF - Frontiers in Genetics
M1 - 635451
ER -