4.6 Article

Prediction of the tetramer protein complex interaction based on CNN and SVM

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2023.1076904

Keywords

tetramer protein complex interaction; feature map; CNN; SVM ensemble method; under-sampling

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Protein-protein interactions are crucial in life activities. This paper focuses on studying the tetramer protein complex interaction, including predicting the interaction between chains of the tetramer protein complex and predicting the tetramer protein complex interface residue pairs. The proposed models achieved promising results with an AUC value of 0.6263 for predicting chain interactions and an accuracy of 82.14% for predicting interface residue pairs.
Protein-protein interactions play an important role in life activities. The study of protein-protein interactions helps to better understand the mechanism of protein complex interaction, which is crucial for drug design, protein function annotation and three-dimensional structure prediction of protein complexes. In this paper, we study the tetramer protein complex interaction. The research has two parts: The first part is to predict the interaction between chains of the tetramer protein complex. In this part, we proposed a feature map to represent a sample generated by two chains of the tetramer protein complex, and constructed a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) model to predict the interaction between chains of the tetramer protein complex. The AUC value of testing set is 0.6263, which indicates that our model can be used to predict the interaction between chains of the tetramer protein complex. The second part is to predict the tetramer protein complex interface residue pairs. In this part, we proposed a Support Vector Machine (SVM) ensemble method based on under-sampling and ensemble method to predict the tetramer protein complex interface residue pairs. In the top 10 predictions, when at least one protein-protein interaction interface is correctly predicted, the accuracy of our method is 82.14%. The result shows that our method is effective for the prediction of the tetramer protein complex interface residue pairs.

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