MGATMDA: Predicting Microbe-Disease Associations via Multi-Component Graph Attention Network

Microbes are parasitic in various human body organs and play significant roles in a wide range of diseases. Identifying microbe-disease associations is conducive to the identification of potential drug targets. Considering the high cost and risk of biological experiments, developing computational ap...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE/ACM transactions on computational biology and bioinformatics 2022-11, Vol.19 (6), p.3578-3585
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Dayun, Liu, Junyi, Luo, Yi, He, Qihua, Deng, Lei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Microbes are parasitic in various human body organs and play significant roles in a wide range of diseases. Identifying microbe-disease associations is conducive to the identification of potential drug targets. Considering the high cost and risk of biological experiments, developing computational approaches to explore the relationship between microbes and diseases is an alternative choice. However, most existing methods are based on unreliable or noisy similarity, and the prediction accuracy could be affected. Besides, it is still a great challenge for most previous methods to make predictions for the large-scale dataset. In this work, we develop a multi-component Graph Attention Network (GAT) based framework, termed MGATMDA, for predicting microbe-disease associations. MGATMDA is built on a bipartite graph of microbes and diseases. It contains three essential parts: decomposer, combiner, and predictor. The decomposer first decomposes the edges in the bipartite graph to identify the latent components by node-level attention mechanism. The combiner then recombines these latent components automatically to obtain unified embedding for prediction by component-level attention mechanism. Finally, a fully connected network is used to predict unknown microbes-disease associations. Experimental results showed that our proposed method outperformed eight state-of-the-art methods. Case studies for two common diseases further demonstrated the effectiveness of MGATMDA in predicting potential microbe-disease associations. The codes are available at Github https://github.com/dayunliu/MGATMDA .
ISSN:1545-5963
1557-9964
DOI:10.1109/TCBB.2021.3116318