Synthetic lethal connectivity and graph transformer improve synthetic lethality prediction.


Journal

Briefings in bioinformatics
ISSN: 1477-4054
Titre abrégé: Brief Bioinform
Pays: England
ID NLM: 100912837

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
25 Jul 2024
Historique:
received: 29 04 2024
revised: 14 06 2024
accepted: 16 08 2024
medline: 31 8 2024
pubmed: 31 8 2024
entrez: 29 8 2024
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Synthetic lethality (SL) has shown great promise for the discovery of novel targets in cancer. CRISPR double-knockout (CDKO) technologies can only screen several hundred genes and their combinations, but not genome-wide. Therefore, good SL prediction models are highly needed for genes and gene pairs selection in CDKO experiments. However, lack of scalable SL properties prevents generalizability of SL interactions to out-of-sample data, thereby hindering modeling efforts. In this paper, we recognize that SL connectivity is a scalable and generalizable SL property. We develop a novel two-step multilayer encoder for individual sample-specific SL prediction model (MLEC-iSL), which predicts SL connectivity first and SL interactions subsequently. MLEC-iSL has three encoders, namely, gene, graph, and transformer encoders. MLEC-iSL achieves high SL prediction performance in K562 (AUPR, 0.73; AUC, 0.72) and Jurkat (AUPR, 0.73; AUC, 0.71) cells, while no existing methods exceed 0.62 AUPR and AUC. The prediction performance of MLEC-iSL is validated in a CDKO experiment in 22Rv1 cells, yielding a 46.8% SL rate among 987 selected gene pairs. The screen also reveals SL dependency between apoptosis and mitosis cell death pathways.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39210507
pii: 7745393
doi: 10.1093/bib/bbae425
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.

Auteurs

Kunjie Fan (K)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Birkan Gökbağ (B)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Shan Tang (S)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, 500 W. 12 ave, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Shangjia Li (S)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Yirui Huang (Y)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, 500 W. 12 ave, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Lingling Wang (L)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Lijun Cheng (L)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Lang Li (L)

Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.
Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, 500 W. 12 ave, Columbus, OH 43210, United States.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH