Predicting RNA–protein binding sites and motifs through combining local and global deep convolutional neural networks

Abstract Motivation RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) take over 5–10% of the eukaryotic proteome and play key roles in many biological processes, e.g. gene regulation. Experimental detection of RBP binding sites is still time-intensive and high-costly. Instead, computational prediction of the RBP binding...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioinformatics 2018-10, Vol.34 (20), p.3427-3436
Hauptverfasser: Pan, Xiaoyong, Shen, Hong-Bin
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Motivation RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) take over 5–10% of the eukaryotic proteome and play key roles in many biological processes, e.g. gene regulation. Experimental detection of RBP binding sites is still time-intensive and high-costly. Instead, computational prediction of the RBP binding sites using patterns learned from existing annotation knowledge is a fast approach. From the biological point of view, the local structure context derived from local sequences will be recognized by specific RBPs. However, in computational modeling using deep learning, to our best knowledge, only global representations of entire RNA sequences are employed. So far, the local sequence information is ignored in the deep model construction process. Results In this study, we present a computational method iDeepE to predict RNA–protein binding sites from RNA sequences by combining global and local convolutional neural networks (CNNs). For the global CNN, we pad the RNA sequences into the same length. For the local CNN, we split a RNA sequence into multiple overlapping fixed-length subsequences, where each subsequence is a signal channel of the whole sequence. Next, we train deep CNNs for multiple subsequences and the padded sequences to learn high-level features, respectively. Finally, the outputs from local and global CNNs are combined to improve the prediction. iDeepE demonstrates a better performance over state-of-the-art methods on two large-scale datasets derived from CLIP-seq. We also find that the local CNN runs 1.8 times faster than the global CNN with comparable performance when using GPUs. Our results show that iDeepE has captured experimentally verified binding motifs. Availability and implementation https://github.com/xypan1232/iDeepE Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
ISSN:1367-4803
1460-2059
1367-4811
DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/bty364