4.6 Article

A two-layer integration framework for protein complex detection

Journal

BMC BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12859-016-0939-3

Keywords

Protein complex; Protein interaction data; Co-complex matrix; Consensus matrix; Matrix fusion; Matrix decomposition

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [11171354, 61375033, 61532008, 61402190]
  2. Ministry of Education of China [20120171110016]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province [S2013020012796]
  4. Self-determined Research Funds of CCNU from the colleges' basic research and operation of MOE [CCNU15A05039, CCNU15ZD011]
  5. City University of Hong Kong [9610034]

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Background: Protein complexes carry out nearly all signaling and functional processes within cells. The study of protein complexes is an effective strategy to analyze cellular functions and biological processes. With the increasing availability of proteomics data, various computational methods have recently been developed to predict protein complexes. However, different computational methods are based on their own assumptions and designed to work on different data sources, and various biological screening methods have their unique experiment conditions, and are often different in scale and noise level. Therefore, a single computational method on a specific data source is generally not able to generate comprehensive and reliable prediction results. Results: In this paper, we develop a novel Two-layer INtegrative Complex Detection (TINCD) model to detect protein complexes, leveraging the information from both clustering results and raw data sources. In particular, we first integrate various clustering results to construct consensus matrices for proteins to measure their overall co-complex propensity. Second, we combine these consensus matrices with the co-complex score matrix derived from Tandem Affinity Purification/Mass Spectrometry (TAP) data and obtain an integrated co-complex similarity network via an unsupervised metric fusion method. Finally, a novel graph regularized doubly stochastic matrix decomposition model is proposed to detect overlapping protein complexes from the integrated similarity network. Conclusions: Extensive experimental results demonstrate that TINCD performs much better than 21 state-of-the-art complex detection techniques, including ensemble clustering and data integration techniques.

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