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Predicting protein complex in protein interaction network - a supervised learning based method.

Authors :
Feng Ying Yu
Zhi Hao Yang
Nan Tang
Hong Fei Lin
Jian Wang
Zhi Wei Yang
Source :
BMC Systems Biology. 8 Supplemet 3, Vol. 8, p1-16. 16p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: Protein complexes are important for understanding principles of cellular organization and function. High-throughput experimental techniques have produced a large amount of protein interactions, making it possible to predict protein complexes from protein -protein interaction networks. However, most of current methods are unsupervised learning based methods which can't utilize the information of the large amount of available known complexes. Methods: We present a supervised learning-based method for predicting protein complexes in protein - protein interaction networks. The method extracts rich features from both the unweighted and weighted networks to train a Regression model, which is then used for the cliques filtering, growth, and candidate complex filtering. The model utilizes additional “uncertainty" samples and, therefore, is more discriminative when used in the complex detection algorithm. In addition, our method uses the maximal cliques found by the Cliques algorithm as the initial cliques, which has been proven to be more effective than the method of expanding from the seeding proteins used in other methods. Results: The experimental results on several PIN datasets show that in most cases the performance of our method are superior to comparable state-of-the-art protein complex detection techniques. Conclusions: The results demonstrate the several advantages of our method over other state-of-the-art techniques. Firstly, our method is a supervised learning-based method that can make full use of the information of the available known complexes instead of being only based on the topological structure of the PIN. That also means, if more training samples are provided, our method can achieve better performance than those unsupervised methods. Secondly, we design the rich feature set to describe the properties of the known complexes, which includes not only the features from the unweighted network, but also those from the weighted network built based on the Gene Ontology information. Thirdly, our Regression model utilizes additional “uncertainty" samples and, therefore, becomes more discriminative, whose effectiveness for the complex detection is indicated by our experimental results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17520509
Volume :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BMC Systems Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135740484
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-8-S3-S4