NPF:network propagation for protein function prediction

The accurate annotation of protein functions is of great significance in elucidating the phenomena of life, treating disease and developing new medicines. Various methods have been developed to facilitate the prediction of these functions by combining protein interaction networks (PINs) with multi-o...

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Published inBMC bioinformatics Vol. 21; no. 1; pp. 1 - 355
Main Authors Zhao, Bihai, Zhang, Zhihong, Jiang, Meiping, Hu, Sai, Luo, Yingchun, Wang, Lei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BioMed Central Ltd 12.08.2020
BioMed Central
BMC
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Summary:The accurate annotation of protein functions is of great significance in elucidating the phenomena of life, treating disease and developing new medicines. Various methods have been developed to facilitate the prediction of these functions by combining protein interaction networks (PINs) with multi-omics data. However, it is still challenging to make full use of multiple biological to improve the performance of functions annotation. We presented NPF (Network Propagation for Functions prediction), an integrative protein function predicting framework assisted by network propagation and functional module detection, for discovering interacting partners with similar functions to target proteins. NPF leverages knowledge of the protein interaction network architecture and multi-omics data, such as domain annotation and protein complex information, to augment protein-protein functional similarity in a propagation manner. We have verified the great potential of NPF for accurately inferring protein functions. According to the comprehensive evaluation of NPF, it delivered a better performance than other competing methods in terms of leave-one-out cross-validation and ten-fold cross validation. We demonstrated that network propagation, together with multi-omics data, can both discover more partners with similar function, and is unconstricted by the "small-world" feature of protein interaction networks. We conclude that the performance of function prediction depends greatly on whether we can extract and exploit proper functional information of similarity from protein correlations.
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ISSN:1471-2105
1471-2105
DOI:10.1186/s12859-020-03663-7