Learning Graph-Level Representation for Drug Discovery
This addresses a bottleneck in drug discovery by enabling more effective graph-level classification and regression for small molecules, though it is incremental over existing graph neural network methods.
The paper tackles the problem of predicting molecular properties like efficacy and toxicity in drug discovery by introducing a dummy super node to learn graph-level representations, improving performance on MoleculeNet benchmarks.
Predicating macroscopic influences of drugs on human body, like efficacy and toxicity, is a central problem of small-molecule based drug discovery. Molecules can be represented as an undirected graph, and we can utilize graph convolution networks to predication molecular properties. However, graph convolutional networks and other graph neural networks all focus on learning node-level representation rather than graph-level representation. Previous works simply sum all feature vectors for all nodes in the graph to obtain the graph feature vector for drug predication. In this paper, we introduce a dummy super node that is connected with all nodes in the graph by a directed edge as the representation of the graph and modify the graph operation to help the dummy super node learn graph-level feature. Thus, we can handle graph-level classification and regression in the same way as node-level classification and regression. In addition, we apply focal loss to address class imbalance in drug datasets. The experiments on MoleculeNet show that our method can effectively improve the performance of molecular properties predication.