4.7 Article

Predicting lncRNA-disease associations based on combining selective similarity matrix fusion and bidirectional linear neighborhood label propagation

Journal

BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbac595

Keywords

lncRNA-disease associations; selective similarity matrix fusion; bidirectional linear neighborhood label propagation

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Recent studies have found that lncRNAs are closely linked to human diseases and provide new opportunities for detection and therapy. Existing similarity fusion methods suffer from noise and self-similarity loss. This paper proposes a new prediction approach, SSMF-BLNP, which combines selective similarity matrix fusion and bidirectional linear neighborhood label propagation, and achieves better performance compared to other state-of-the-art methods.
Recent studies have revealed that long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are closely linked to several human diseases, providing new opportunities for their use in detection and therapy. Many graph propagation and similarity fusion approaches can be used for predicting potential lncRNA-disease associations. However, existing similarity fusion approaches suffer from noise and self-similarity loss in the fusion process. To address these problems, a new prediction approach, termed SSMF-BLNP, based on organically combining selective similarity matrix fusion (SSMF) and bidirectional linear neighborhood label propagation (BLNP), is proposed in this paper to predict lncRNA-disease associations. In SSMF, self-similarity networks of lncRNAs and diseases are obtained by selective preprocessing and nonlinear iterative fusion. The fusion process assigns weights to each initial similarity network and introduces a unit matrix that can reduce noise and compensate for the loss of self-similarity. In BLNP, the initial lncRNA-disease associations are employed in both lncRNA and disease directions as label information for linear neighborhood label propagation. The propagation was then performed on the self-similarity network obtained from SSMF to derive the scoring matrix for predicting the relationships between lncRNAs and diseases. Experimental results showed that SSMF-BLNP performed better than seven other state of-the-art approaches. Furthermore, a case study demonstrated up to 100% and 80% accuracy in 10 lncRNAs associated with hepatocellular carcinoma and 10 lncRNAs associated with renal cell carcinoma, respectively. The source code and datasets used in this paper are available at: https://github.com/RuiBingo/SSMF-BLNP.

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