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1.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 3643, 2023 03 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36871056

ABSTRACT

The search for an effective drug is still urgent for COVID-19 as no drug with proven clinical efficacy is available. Finding the new purpose of an approved or investigational drug, known as drug repurposing, has become increasingly popular in recent years. We propose here a new drug repurposing approach for COVID-19, based on knowledge graph (KG) embeddings. Our approach learns "ensemble embeddings" of entities and relations in a COVID-19 centric KG, in order to get a better latent representation of the graph elements. Ensemble KG-embeddings are subsequently used in a deep neural network trained for discovering potential drugs for COVID-19. Compared to related works, we retrieve more in-trial drugs among our top-ranked predictions, thus giving greater confidence in our prediction for out-of-trial drugs. For the first time to our knowledge, molecular docking is then used to evaluate the predictions obtained from drug repurposing using KG embedding. We show that Fosinopril is a potential ligand for the SARS-CoV-2 nsp13 target. We also provide explanations of our predictions thanks to rules extracted from the KG and instanciated by KG-derived explanatory paths. Molecular evaluation and explanatory paths bring reliability to our results and constitute new complementary and reusable methods for assessing KG-based drug repurposing.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Drug Repositioning , Molecular Docking Simulation , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Reproducibility of Results , Learning
2.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 23(Suppl 2): 433, 2022 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36510133

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Automatic functional annotation of proteins is an open research problem in bioinformatics. The growing number of protein entries in public databases, for example in UniProtKB, poses challenges in manual functional annotation. Manual annotation requires expert human curators to search and read related research articles, interpret the results, and assign the annotations to the proteins. Thus, it is a time-consuming and expensive process. Therefore, designing computational tools to perform automatic annotation leveraging the high quality manual annotations that already exist in UniProtKB/SwissProt is an important research problem RESULTS: In this paper, we extend and adapt the GrAPFI (graph-based automatic protein function inference) (Sarker et al. in BMC Bioinform 21, 2020; Sarker et al., in: Proceedings of 7th international conference on complex networks and their applications, Cambridge, 2018) method for automatic annotation of proteins with gene ontology (GO) terms renaming it as GrAPFI-GO. The original GrAPFI method uses label propagation in a similarity graph where proteins are linked through the domains, families, and superfamilies that they share. Here, we also explore various types of similarity measures based on common neighbors in the graph. Moreover, GO terms are arranged in a hierarchical manner according to semantic parent-child relations. Therefore, we propose an efficient pruning and post-processing technique that integrates both semantic similarity and hierarchical relations between the GO terms. We produce experimental results comparing the GrAPFI-GO method with and without considering common neighbors similarity. We also test the performance of GrAPFI-GO and other annotation tools for GO annotation on a benchmark of proteins with and without the proposed pruning and post-processing procedure. CONCLUSION: Our results show that the proposed semantic hierarchical post-processing potentially improves the performance of GrAPFI-GO and of other annotation tools as well. Thus, GrAPFI-GO exposes an original efficient and reusable procedure, to exploit the semantic relations among the GO terms in order to improve the automatic annotation of protein functions.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology , Semantics , Humans , Gene Ontology , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Computational Biology/methods , Databases, Protein , Proteins/chemistry
3.
4.
Gastroenterology ; 158(1): 76-94.e2, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31593701

ABSTRACT

Since 2010, substantial progress has been made in artificial intelligence (AI) and its application to medicine. AI is explored in gastroenterology for endoscopic analysis of lesions, in detection of cancer, and to facilitate the analysis of inflammatory lesions or gastrointestinal bleeding during wireless capsule endoscopy. AI is also tested to assess liver fibrosis and to differentiate patients with pancreatic cancer from those with pancreatitis. AI might also be used to establish prognoses of patients or predict their response to treatments, based on multiple factors. We review the ways in which AI may help physicians make a diagnosis or establish a prognosis and discuss its limitations, knowing that further randomized controlled studies will be required before the approval of AI techniques by the health authorities.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted/methods , Gastroenterology/methods , Gastrointestinal Diseases/diagnosis , Liver Diseases/diagnosis , Clinical Decision-Making/methods , Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Decision Trees , Gastrointestinal Diseases/mortality , Gastrointestinal Diseases/therapy , Humans , Liver Diseases/mortality , Liver Diseases/therapy , Prognosis , Treatment Outcome
5.
J Comput Biol ; 23(1): 10-20, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26484752

ABSTRACT

Ionizing-radiation-resistant bacteria (IRRB) are important in biotechnology. In this context, in silico methods of phenotypic prediction and genotype-phenotype relationship discovery are limited. In this work, we analyzed basal DNA repair proteins of most known proteome sequences of IRRB and ionizing-radiation-sensitive bacteria (IRSB) in order to learn a classifier that correctly predicts this bacterial phenotype. We formulated the problem of predicting bacterial ionizing radiation resistance (IRR) as a multiple-instance learning (MIL) problem, and we proposed a novel approach for this purpose. We provide a MIL-based prediction system that classifies a bacterium to either IRRB or IRSB. The experimental results of the proposed system are satisfactory with 91.5% of successful predictions.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/radiation effects , Algorithms , Artificial Intelligence , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , DNA Repair , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Genome , Models, Biological , Phenotype , Radiation, Ionizing
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