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1.
Front Genet ; 15: 1356205, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38495672

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been in the clinical use as potential prognostic biomarkers of various types of cancer. Identifying associations between lncRNAs and diseases helps capture the potential biomarkers and design efficient therapeutic options for diseases. Wet experiments for identifying these associations are costly and laborious. Methods: We developed LDA-SABC, a novel boosting-based framework for lncRNA-disease association (LDA) prediction. LDA-SABC extracts LDA features based on singular value decomposition (SVD) and classifies lncRNA-disease pairs (LDPs) by incorporating LightGBM and AdaBoost into the convolutional neural network. Results: The LDA-SABC performance was evaluated under five-fold cross validations (CVs) on lncRNAs, diseases, and LDPs. It obviously outperformed four other classical LDA inference methods (SDLDA, LDNFSGB, LDASR, and IPCAF) through precision, recall, accuracy, F1 score, AUC, and AUPR. Based on the accurate LDA prediction performance of LDA-SABC, we used it to find potential lncRNA biomarkers for lung cancer. The results elucidated that 7SK and HULC could have a relationship with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), respectively. Conclusion: We hope that our proposed LDA-SABC method can help improve the LDA identification.

2.
Comput Biol Med ; 166: 107440, 2023 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37738898

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Spatial transcriptomics technologies fully utilize spatial location information, tissue morphological features, and transcriptional profiles. Integrating these data can greatly advance our understanding about cell biology in the morphological background. METHODS: We developed an innovative spatial clustering method called STGNNks by combining graph neural network, denoising auto-encoder, and k-sums clustering. First, spatial resolved transcriptomics data are preprocessed and a hybrid adjacency matrix is constructed. Next, gene expressions and spatial context are integrated to learn spots' embedding features by a deep graph infomax-based graph convolutional network. Third, the learned features are mapped to a low-dimensional space through a zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB)-based denoising auto-encoder. Fourth, a k-sums clustering algorithm is developed to identify spatial domains by combining k-means clustering and the ratio-cut clustering algorithms. Finally, it implements spatial trajectory inference, spatially variable gene identification, and differentially expressed gene detection based on the pseudo-space-time method on six 10x Genomics Visium datasets. RESULTS: We compared our proposed STGNNks method with five other spatial clustering methods, CCST, Seurat, stLearn, Scanpy and SEDR. For the first time, four internal indicators in the area of machine learning, that is, silhouette coefficient, the Davies-Bouldin index, the Caliniski-Harabasz index, and the S_Dbw index, were used to measure the clustering performance of STGNNks with CCST, Seurat, stLearn, Scanpy and SEDR on five spatial transcriptomics datasets without labels (i.e., Adult Mouse Brain (FFPE), Adult Mouse Kidney (FFPE), Human Breast Cancer (Block A Section 2), Human Breast Cancer (FFPE), and Human Lymph Node). And two external indicators including adjusted Rand index (ARI) and normalized mutual information (NMI) were applied to evaluate the performance of the above six methods on Human Breast Cancer (Block A Section 1) with real labels. The comparison experiments elucidated that STGNNks obtained the smallest Davies-Bouldin and S_Dbw values and the largest Silhouette Coefficient, Caliniski-Harabasz, ARI and NMI, significantly outperforming the above five spatial transcriptomics analysis algorithms. Furthermore, we detected the top six spatially variable genes and the top five differentially expressed genes in each cluster on the above five unlabeled datasets. And the pseudo-space-time tree plot with hierarchical layout demonstrated a flow of Human Breast Cancer (Block A Section 1) progress in three clades branching from three invasive ductal carcinoma regions to multiple ductal carcinoma in situ sub-clusters. CONCLUSION: We anticipate that STGNNks can efficiently improve spatial transcriptomics data analysis and further boost the diagnosis and therapy of related diseases. The codes are publicly available at https://github.com/plhhnu/STGNNks.

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