Improving the prediction of yeast protein function using weighted protein-protein interactions

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Abstract

Background: Bioinformatics can be used to predict protein function, leading to an understanding of cellular activities, and equally-weighted protein-protein interactions (PPI) are normally used to predict such protein functions. The present study provides a weighting strategy for PPI to improve the prediction of protein functions. The weights are dependent on the local and global network topologies and the number of experimental verification methods. The proposed methods were applied to the yeast proteome and integrated with the neighbour counting method to predict the functions of unknown proteins. Results: A new technique to weight interactions in the yeast proteome is presented. The weights are related to the network topology (local and global) and the number of identified methods, and the results revealed improvement in the sensitivity and specificity of prediction in terms of cellular role and cellular locations. This method (new weights) was compared with a method that utilises interactions with the same weight and it was shown to be superior. Conclusions: A new method for weighting the interactions in protein-protein interaction networks is presented. Experimental results concerning yeast proteins demonstrated that weighting interactions integrated with the neighbor counting method improved the sensitivity and specificity of prediction in terms of two functional categories: cellular role and cell locations. © 2011 Ahmed et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Ahmed, K. S., Saloma, N. H., & Kadah, Y. M. (2011). Improving the prediction of yeast protein function using weighted protein-protein interactions. Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-4682-8-11

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