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个人信息Personal Information
教授
博士生导师
硕士生导师
性别:女
毕业院校:大连理工大学
学位:博士
所在单位:计算机科学与技术学院
学科:计算机应用技术
办公地点:创新园大厦B811
联系方式:0411-84706009-2811
电子邮箱:wangjian@dlut.edu.cn
Detection of protein complexes from multiple protein interaction networks using graph embedding
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论文类型:期刊论文
发表时间:2019-05-01
发表刊物:ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN MEDICINE
收录刊物:SCIE、PubMed、EI
卷号:96
期号:,SI
页面范围:107-115
ISSN号:0933-3657
关键字:Network embedding; Protein complex identification; Protein-protein interaction networks
摘要:Cellular processes are typically carried out by protein complexes rather than individual proteins. Identifying protein complexes is one of the keys to understanding principles of cellular organization and function. Also, protein complexes are a group of interacting genes underlying similar diseases, which points out the therapeutic importance of protein complexes. With the development of life science and computing science, an increasing amount of protein-protein interaction (PPI) data becomes available, which makes it possible to predict protein complexes from PPI networks. However, most PPI data produced by high-throughput experiments often has many false positive interactions and false negative edge loss, which makes it difficult to predict complexes accurately. In this paper, we present a new method, named as MEMO (Multiple network Embedding for coMplex detectiOn), to detect protein complexes. MEMO integrates multiple PPI datasets from different species into a single PPI network by using functional orthology information across multiple species and then uses a graph embedding technology to embed protein nodes of the network into continuous vector spaces, so as to quantify the relationships between nodes and better guild the protein complex detection process. Finally, it utilizes a seed-and-extend strategy to identify protein complexes from multiple PPI networks based on the similarities of their corresponding protein representations. As part of our approach, we also define a new quality measure which combines the cluster cohesiveness and cluster density to measure the likelihood of a detected protein complex being a real protein complex. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art complex detection techniques.