Abstract
Exploring protein-protein interaction sites (PPIS) is of significance to elucidating the intrinsic mechanisms of diverse biological processes. On this basis, recent studies have applied deep learning-based technologies to overcome the high cost of wet experiments for PPIS determination. However, the existing methods still suffer from two limitations that remain to be solved. Firstly, the process of feature aggregation in most methods only took into account node features, but ignored the complex edge features of the target residue to its neighbor residues, resulting in insufficient local feature extraction. Secondly, such feature aggregation was limited to aggregating spatially adjacent residues, and could not capture the "remote" residues that played a critical role in determining PPIS, which can be summed up as the lack of global feature at the residue level. To break the above limitations, a local-global structural information aggregation framework, LGS-PPIS, was proposed in this study, including two modules of edge-aware graph convolutional network (EA-GCN) and self-attention integrated with initial residual and identity mapping (SA-RIM), which achieved the aggregation of local and global information for PPIS prediction. Evaluation results of LGS-PPIS showed that the proposed method outperformed state-of-the-art deep learning methods on three widely used PPIS prediction benchmarks. Besides, the results of ablation experiments demonstrated that the local features from spatially adjacent residues and global features from "remote" residues separately captured by EA-GCN and SA-RIM could benefit the model performance. Among them, the former was shown to have a more significant role in the PPIS prediction.
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