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Publication | Open Access

A network integration approach for drug-target interaction prediction and computational drug repositioning from heterogeneous information

850

Citations

63

References

2017

Year

TLDR

Let's collect: Background: lines with [Background] only: first line. Also [Findings, Background] line also contains Background. So background content: "The emergence of large-scale genomic, chemical and pharmacological data provides new opportunities for drug discovery and repositioning." plus "These results indicate that DTINet can provide a practically useful tool for integrating heterogeneous information to predict new drug-target interactions and repurpose existing drugs. Network-based data integration for drug-target prediction is a promising avenue for drug repositioning, but performance is wanting." Actually that line includes both Findings and Background. So background content includes that sentence.

Abstract

The emergence of large-scale genomic, chemical and pharmacological data provides new opportunities for drug discovery and repositioning. In this work, we develop a computational pipeline, called DTINet, to predict novel drug-target interactions from a constructed heterogeneous network, which integrates diverse drug-related information. DTINet focuses on learning a low-dimensional vector representation of features, which accurately explains the topological properties of individual nodes in the heterogeneous network, and then makes prediction based on these representations via a vector space projection scheme. DTINet achieves substantial performance improvement over other state-of-the-art methods for drug-target interaction prediction. Moreover, we experimentally validate the novel interactions between three drugs and the cyclooxygenase proteins predicted by DTINet, and demonstrate the new potential applications of these identified cyclooxygenase inhibitors in preventing inflammatory diseases. These results indicate that DTINet can provide a practically useful tool for integrating heterogeneous information to predict new drug-target interactions and repurpose existing drugs.Network-based data integration for drug-target prediction is a promising avenue for drug repositioning, but performance is wanting. Here, the authors introduce DTINet, whose performance is enhanced in the face of noisy, incomplete and high-dimensional biological data by learning low-dimensional vector representations.

References

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