Abstract

The virus poses a longstanding and enduring danger to various forms of life. Despite the ongoing endeavors to combat viral diseases, there exists a necessity to explore and develop novel therapeutic options. Antiviral peptides are bioactive molecules with a favorable toxicity profile, making them promising alternatives for viral infection treatment. Therefore, this article employed a generative adversarial network for antiviral peptide augmentation and a novel two-step authentication process for augmented synthetic peptides to enhance antiviral activity prediction. Additionally, five widely utilized deep learning models were employed for classification purposes. Initially, a GAN was used to augment the antiviral peptide. In a two-step authentication process, the NCBI-BLAST was utilized to identify the antiviral activity resemblance between the synthetic and real peptide. Subsequently, the hydrophobicity, hydrophilicity, hydroxylic nature, positive charge, and negative charge of synthetic and authentic antiviral peptides were compared before their utilization. Later, to examine the impact of authenticated peptide augmentation in the prediction of antiviral peptides, a comparison is conducted with the outcomes of non-peptide augmented prediction. The study demonstrates that the 1-D convolution neural network with augmented peptide exhibits superior performance compared to other employed classifiers and state-of-the-art models. The network attains a mean classification accuracy of 95.41%, an AUC value of 0.95, and an MCC value of 0.90 on the benchmark antiviral and anti-corona peptides dataset. Thus, the performance of the proposed model indicates its efficacy in predicting the antiviral activity of peptides.

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