Highly accurate classification and discovery of microbial protein-coding gene functions using FunGeneTyper: an extensible deep learning framework.
Guoqing ZhangHui WangZhiguo ZhangLu ZhangGuibing GuoJian YangFajie YuanFeng JuPublished in: Briefings in bioinformatics (2024)
High-throughput DNA sequencing technologies decode tremendous amounts of microbial protein-coding gene sequences. However, accurately assigning protein functions to novel gene sequences remain a challenge. To this end, we developed FunGeneTyper, an extensible framework with two new deep learning models (i.e., FunTrans and FunRep), structured databases, and supporting resources for achieving highly accurate (Accuracy > 0.99, F1-score > 0.97) and fine-grained classification of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and virulence factor genes. Using an experimentally confirmed dataset of ARGs comprising remote homologous sequences as the test set, our framework achieves by-far-the-best performance in the discovery of new ARGs from human gut (F1-score: 0.6948), wastewater (0.6072), and soil (0.5445) microbiomes, beating the state-of-the-art bioinformatics tools and sequence alignment-based (F1-score: 0.0556-0.5065) and domain-based (F1-score: 0.2630-0.5224) annotation approaches. Furthermore, our framework is implemented as a lightweight, privacy-preserving, and plug-and-play neural network module, facilitating its versatility and accessibility to developers and users worldwide. We anticipate widespread utilization of FunGeneTyper (https://github.com/emblab-westlake/FunGeneTyper) for precise classification of protein-coding gene functions and the discovery of numerous valuable enzymes. This advancement will have a significant impact on various fields, including microbiome research, biotechnology, metagenomics, and bioinformatics.
Keyphrases
- deep learning
- antibiotic resistance genes
- high throughput
- microbial community
- genome wide
- machine learning
- genome wide identification
- wastewater treatment
- small molecule
- protein protein
- copy number
- amino acid
- neural network
- artificial intelligence
- binding protein
- anaerobic digestion
- convolutional neural network
- escherichia coli
- dna damage
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- healthcare
- biofilm formation
- big data
- transcription factor
- genome wide analysis
- social media
- molecular dynamics
- circulating tumor cells