Abstract

Prediction of binding sites for transcription factors is important to understand how the latter regulate gene expression and how this regulation can be modulated for therapeutic purposes. A consistent number of references address this issue with different approaches, Machine Learning being one of the most successful. Nevertheless, we note that many such approaches fail to propose a robust and meaningful method to embed the genetic data under analysis. We try to overcome this problem by proposing a bidirectional transformer-based encoder, empowered by bidirectional long-short term memory layers and with a capsule layer responsible for the final prediction. To evaluate the efficiency of the proposed approach, we use benchmark ChIP-seq datasets of five cell lines available in the ENCODE repository (A549, GM12878, Hep-G2, H1-hESC, and Hela). The results show that the proposed method can predict TFBS within the five different cell lines very well; moreover, cross-cell predictions provide satisfactory results as well. Experiments conducted across cell lines are reinforced by the analysis of five additional lines used only to test the model trained using the others. The results confirm that prediction across cell lines remains very high, allowing an extensive cross-transcription factor analysis to be performed from which several indications of interest for molecular biology may be drawn.

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