Abstract

Prediction of virus-host protein-protein interactions (PPI) is a broad research area where various machine-learning-based classifiers are developed. Transforming biological data into machine-usable features is a preliminary step in constructing these virus-host PPI prediction tools. In this study, we have adopted a virus-host PPI dataset and a reduced amino acids alphabet to create tripeptide features and introduced a correlation coefficient-based feature selection. We applied feature selection across several correlation coefficient metrics and statistically tested their relevance in a structural context. We compared the performance of feature-selection models against that of the baseline virus-host PPI prediction models created using different classification algorithms without the feature selection. We also tested the performance of these baseline models against the previously available tools to ensure their predictive power is acceptable. Here, the Pearson coefficient provides the best performance with respect to the baseline model as measured by AUPR; a drop of 0.003 in AUPR while achieving a 73.3% (from 686 to 183) reduction in the number of tripeptides features for random forest. The results suggest our correlation coefficient-based feature selection approach, while decreasing the computation time and space complexity, has a limited impact on the prediction performance of virus-host PPI prediction tools.

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