Abstract

Graph neural networks have drawn increasing attention and achieved remarkable progress recently due to their potential applications for a large amount of irregular data. It is a natural way to represent protein as a graph. In this work, we focus on protein-protein binding sites prediction between the ligand and receptor proteins. Previous work just simply adopts graph convolution to learn residue representations of ligand and receptor proteins, then concatenates them and feeds the concatenated representation into a fully connected layer to make predictions, losing much of the information contained in complexes and failing to obtain an optimal prediction. In this paper, we present Intra-Inter Graph Representation Learning for protein-protein binding sites prediction (IIGRL). Specifically, for intra-graph learning, we maximize the mutual information between local node representation and global graph summary to encourage node representation to embody the global information of protein graph. Then we explore fusing two separate ligand and receptor graphs as a whole graph and learning affinities between their residues/nodes to propagate information to each other, which could effectively capture inter-protein information and further enhance the discrimination of residue pairs. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed IIGRL model outperforms state-of-the-art methods.

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