4.7 Article

Predicting drug-target binding affinity through molecule representation block based on multi-head attention and skip connection

Journal

BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbac468

Keywords

drug-target binding affinity; computational model; multi-head attention; skip connection; molecule representation block; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61972399]

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This study presents a novel model called MRBDTA to improve the existing computational models for drug-target binding affinity prediction. MRBDTA achieves better performance in prediction accuracy and can provide interpretability analysis. The case studies demonstrate the reliable performance of MRBDTA in drug design for SARS-CoV-2.
Exiting computational models for drug-target binding affinity prediction have much room for improvement in prediction accuracy, robustness and generalization ability. Most deep learning models lack interpretability analysis and few studies provide application examples. Based on these observations, we presented a novel model named Molecule Representation Block-based Drug-Target binding Affinity prediction (MRBDTA). MRBDTA is composed of embedding and positional encoding, molecule representation block and interaction learning module. The advantages of MRBDTA are reflected in three aspects: (i) developing Trans block to extract molecule features through improving the encoder of transformer, (ii) introducing skip connection at encoder level in Trans block and (iii) enhancing the ability to capture interaction sites between proteins and drugs. The test results on two benchmark datasets manifest that MRBDTA achieves the best performance compared with 11 state-of-the-art models. Besides, through replacing Trans block with single Trans encoder and removing skip connection in Trans block, we verified that Trans block and skip connection could effectively improve the prediction accuracy and reliability of MRBDTA. Then, relying on multi-head attention mechanism, we performed interpretability analysis to illustrate that MRBDTA can correctly capture part of interaction sites between proteins and drugs. In case studies, we firstly employed MRBDTA to predict binding affinities between Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) replication-related proteins. Secondly, we compared true binding affinities between 3C-like proteinase and 185 drugs with those predicted by MRBDTA. The final results of case studies reveal reliable performance of MRBDTA in drug design for SARS-CoV-2.

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