Login / Signup

MGNDTI: A Drug-Target Interaction Prediction Framework Based on Multimodal Representation Learning and the Gating Mechanism.

Li-Hong PengXin LiuMin ChenWen LiaoJiale MaoLiqian Zhou
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2024)
Drug-Target Interaction (DTI) prediction facilitates acceleration of drug discovery and promotes drug repositioning. Most existing deep learning-based DTI prediction methods can better extract discriminative features for drugs and proteins, but they rarely consider multimodal features of drugs. Moreover, learning the interaction representations between drugs and targets needs further exploration. Here, we proposed a simple M  ulti-modal G  ating N  etwork for DTI prediction, MGNDTI, based on multimodal representation learning and the gating mechanism. MGNDTI first learns the sequence representations of drugs and targets using different retentive networks. Next, it extracts molecular graph features of drugs through a graph convolutional network. Subsequently, it devises a multimodal gating network to obtain the joint representations of drugs and targets. Finally, it builds a fully connected network for computing the interaction probability. MGNDTI was benchmarked against seven state-of-the-art DTI prediction models (CPI-GNN, TransformerCPI, MolTrans, BACPI, CPGL, GIFDTI, and FOTF-CPI) using four data sets (i.e., Human, C. elegans , BioSNAP, and BindingDB) under four different experimental settings. Through evaluation with AUROC, AUPRC, accuracy, F1 score, and MCC, MGNDTI significantly outperformed the above seven methods. MGNDTI is a powerful tool for DTI prediction, showcasing its superior robustness and generalization ability on diverse data sets and different experimental settings. It is freely available at https://github.com/plhhnu/MGNDTI.
Keyphrases
  • white matter
  • drug induced
  • deep learning
  • drug discovery
  • working memory
  • pain management
  • endothelial cells
  • oxidative stress
  • electronic health record
  • multiple sclerosis
  • big data
  • anti inflammatory
  • network analysis