Abstract

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) play a crucial role in understanding disease pathogenesis, genetic mechanisms, guiding drug design, and other biochemical processes, thus, the identification of PPIs is of great importance. With the rapid development of high-throughput sequencing technology, a large amount of PPIs sequence data has been accumulated. Researchers have designed many experimental methods to detect PPIs by using these sequence data, hence, the prediction of PPIs has become a research hotspot in proteomics. However, since traditional experimental methods are both time-consuming and costly, it is difficult to analyze and predict the massive amount of PPI data quickly and accurately. To address these issues, many computational systems employing machine learning knowledge were widely applied to PPIs prediction, thereby improving the overall recognition rate. In this paper, a novel and efficient computational technology is presented to implement a protein interaction prediction system using only protein sequence information. First, the Position-Specific Iterated Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (PSI-BLAST) was employed to generate a position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM) containing protein evolutionary information from the initial protein sequence. Second, we used a novel data processing feature representation scheme, MatFLDA, to extract the essential information of PSSM for protein sequences and obtained five training and five testing datasets by adopting a five-fold cross-validation method. Finally, the random fern (RFs) classifier was employed to infer the interactions among proteins, and a model called MatFLDA_RFs was developed. The proposed MatFLDA_RFs model achieved good prediction performance with 95.03% average accuracy on Yeast dataset and 85.35% average accuracy on H. pylori dataset, which effectively outperformed other existing computational methods. The experimental results indicate that the proposed method is capable of yielding better prediction results of PPIs, which provides an effective tool for the detection of new PPIs and the in-depth study of proteomics. Finally, we also developed a web server for the proposed model to predict protein-protein interactions, which is freely accessible online at http://120.77.11.78:5001/webserver/MatFLDA_RFs.

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