Abstract
Research shows that competing endogenous RNA is widely involved in gene regulation in cells, and identifying the association between circular RNA (circRNA), microRNA (miRNA), and cancer can provide new hope for disease diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis. However, affected by reductionism, previous studies regarded the prediction of circRNA-miRNA interaction, circRNA-cancer association, and miRNA-cancer association as separate studies. Currently, few models are capable of simultaneously predicting these three associations. Inspired by holism, we propose a multi-task prediction method based on neighborhood structure embedding and signed graph representation learning, CMCSG, to infer the relationship between circRNA, miRNA, and cancer. Our method aims to extract feature descriptors of all molecules from the circRNA-miRNA-cancer regulatory network using known types of association information to predict unknown types of molecular associations. Specifically, we first constructed the circRNA-miRNA-cancer association network (CMCN), which is constructed based on the experimentally verified biomedical entity regulatory network; next, we combine topological structure embedding methods to extract feature representations in CMCN from local and global perspectives, and use denoising autoencoder for enhancement; then, combined with balance theory and state theory, molecular features are extracted from the point of social relations through the propagation and aggregation of signed graph attention network; finally, the GBDT classifier is used to predict the association of molecules. The results show that CMCSG can effectively predict the relationship between circRNA, miRNA, and cancer. Additionally, the case studies also demonstrate that CMCSG is capable of accurately identifying biomarkers across various types of cancer. The data and source code can be found at https://github.com/1axin/CMCSG.
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