AptRank: An Adaptive PageRank Model for Protein Function Prediction on Bi-relational Graphs

January 21, 2016 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Bioinform.

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Authors Biaobin Jiang, Kyle Kloster, David F. Gleich, Michael Gribskov arXiv ID 1601.05506 Category q-bio.MN Cross-listed cs.SI Citations 54 Venue Bioinform. Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Diffusion-based network models are widely used for protein function prediction using protein network data and have been shown to outperform neighborhood- and module-based methods. Recent studies have shown that integrating the hierarchical structure of the Gene Ontology (GO) data dramatically improves prediction accuracy. However, previous methods usually either used the GO hierarchy to refine the prediction results of multiple classifiers, or flattened the hierarchy into a function-function similarity kernel. No study has taken the GO hierarchy into account together with the protein network as a two-layer network model. We first construct a Bi-relational graph (Birg) model comprised of both protein-protein association and function-function hierarchical networks. We then propose two diffusion-based methods, BirgRank and AptRank, both of which use PageRank to diffuse information on this two-layer graph model. BirgRank is an application of traditional PageRank with fixed decay parameters. In contrast, AptRank uses an adaptive mechanism to improve the performance of BirgRank. We evaluate both methods in predicting protein function on yeast, fly, and human datasets, and compare with four previous methods: GeneMANIA, TMC, ProteinRank and clusDCA. We design three validation strategies: missing function prediction, de novo function prediction, and guided function prediction to comprehensively evaluate all six methods. We find that both BirgRank and AptRank outperform the others, especially in missing function prediction when using only 10% of the data for training. AptRank combines protein-protein associations and the GO function-function hierarchy into a two-layer network model without flattening the hierarchy into a similarity kernel. Introducing an adaptive mechanism to the traditional, fixed-parameter model of PageRank greatly improves the accuracy of protein function prediction.
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