LGCEQMMLMay 17, 2014

Identification of functionally related enzymes by learning-to-rank methods

arXiv:1405.4394v17 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of accurately identifying functionally related enzymes for biologists, representing an incremental improvement over existing search methods by leveraging annotated data.

The authors tackled the problem of improving enzyme function prediction by using kernel-based learning algorithms to incorporate biological function annotations during training, resulting in consistent and significant improvements over similarity-based rankings that ignore such annotations.

Enzyme sequences and structures are routinely used in the biological sciences as queries to search for functionally related enzymes in online databases. To this end, one usually departs from some notion of similarity, comparing two enzymes by looking for correspondences in their sequences, structures or surfaces. For a given query, the search operation results in a ranking of the enzymes in the database, from very similar to dissimilar enzymes, while information about the biological function of annotated database enzymes is ignored. In this work we show that rankings of that kind can be substantially improved by applying kernel-based learning algorithms. This approach enables the detection of statistical dependencies between similarities of the active cleft and the biological function of annotated enzymes. This is in contrast to search-based approaches, which do not take annotated training data into account. Similarity measures based on the active cleft are known to outperform sequence-based or structure-based measures under certain conditions. We consider the Enzyme Commission (EC) classification hierarchy for obtaining annotated enzymes during the training phase. The results of a set of sizeable experiments indicate a consistent and significant improvement for a set of similarity measures that exploit information about small cavities in the surface of enzymes.

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