Abstract

miRNAs are a class of small non-coding RNA molecules that play important roles in gene regulation. They are crucial for maintaining normal cellular functions, and dysregulation or dysfunction of miRNAs which are linked to the onset and advancement of multiple human diseases. Research on miRNAs has unveiled novel avenues in the realm of the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of human diseases. However, clinical trials pose challenges and drawbacks, such as complexity and time-consuming processes, which create obstacles for many researchers. Graph Attention Network (GAT) has shown excellent performance in handling graph-structured data for tasks such as link prediction. Some studies have successfully applied GAT to miRNA-disease association prediction. However, there are several drawbacks to existing methods. Firstly, most of the previous models rely solely on concatenation operations to merge features of miRNAs and diseases, which results in the deprivation of significant modality-specific information and even the inclusion of redundant information. Secondly, as the number of layers in GAT increases, there is a possibility of excessive smoothing in the feature extraction process, which significantly affects the prediction accuracy. To address these issues and effectively complete miRNA disease prediction tasks, we propose an innovative model called Multiplex Adaptive Modality Fusion Graph Attention Network (MAMFGAT). MAMFGAT utilizes GAT as the main structure for feature aggregation and incorporates a multi-modal adaptive fusion module to extract features from three interconnected networks: the miRNA-disease association network, the miRNA similarity network, and the disease similarity network. It employs adaptive learning and cross-modality contrastive learning to fuse more effective miRNA and disease feature embeddings as well as incorporates multi-modal residual feature fusion to tackle the problem of excessive feature smoothing in GATs. Finally, we employ a Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) model that takes the embeddings of miRNA and disease features as input to anticipate the presence of potential miRNA-disease associations. Extensive experimental results provide evidence of the superior performance of MAMFGAT in comparison to other state-of-the-art methods. To validate the significance of various modalities and assess the efficacy of the designed modules, we performed an ablation analysis. Furthermore, MAMFGAT shows outstanding performance in three cancer case studies, indicating that it is a reliable method for studying the association between miRNA and diseases. The implementation of MAMFGAT can be accessed at the following GitHub repository: https://github.com/zixiaojin66/MAMFGAT-master.

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