Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is one of the most prevalent chronic neurodegenerative disorders globally, with a rapidly growing population of AD patients and currently no effective therapeutic interventions available. Consequently, the development of therapeutic anti-AD drugs and the identification of AD targets represent one of the most urgent tasks. In this study, in addition to considering known drugs and targets, we explore compound-protein interactions (CPIs) between compounds and proteins relevant to AD. We propose a deep learning model called CKG-IMC to predict Alzheimer’s disease compound-protein interaction relationships. CKG-IMC comprises three modules: a collaborative knowledge graph (CKG), a principal neighborhood aggregation graph neural network (PNA), and an inductive matrix completion (IMC). The collaborative knowledge graph is used to learn semantic associations between entities, PNA is employed to extract structural features of the relationship network, and IMC is utilized for CPIs prediction. Compared with a total of 16 baseline models based on similarities, knowledge graphs, and graph neural networks, our model achieves state-of-the-art performance in experiments of 10-fold cross-validation and independent test. Furthermore, we use CKG-IMC to predict compounds interacting with two confirmed AD targets, 42-amino-acid β-amyloid (Aβ42) protein and microtubule-associated protein tau (tau protein), as well as proteins interacting with five FDA-approved anti-AD drugs. The results indicate that the majority of predictions are supported by literature, and molecular docking experiments demonstrate a strong affinity between the predicted compounds and targets.

Full Text
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