Learning to Denoise Biomedical Knowledge Graph for Robust Molecular Interaction Prediction
This addresses a key limitation in drug discovery by improving robustness in contaminated knowledge graphs, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing KG-based methods.
The paper tackles the problem of noise and inconsistent semantics in biomedical knowledge graphs for molecular interaction prediction, proposing BioKDN which denoises links and smooths relations to achieve state-of-the-art results in drug-target and drug-drug interaction tasks.
Molecular interaction prediction plays a crucial role in forecasting unknown interactions between molecules, such as drug-target interaction (DTI) and drug-drug interaction (DDI), which are essential in the field of drug discovery and therapeutics. Although previous prediction methods have yielded promising results by leveraging the rich semantics and topological structure of biomedical knowledge graphs (KGs), they have primarily focused on enhancing predictive performance without addressing the presence of inevitable noise and inconsistent semantics. This limitation has hindered the advancement of KG-based prediction methods. To address this limitation, we propose BioKDN (Biomedical Knowledge Graph Denoising Network) for robust molecular interaction prediction. BioKDN refines the reliable structure of local subgraphs by denoising noisy links in a learnable manner, providing a general module for extracting task-relevant interactions. To enhance the reliability of the refined structure, BioKDN maintains consistent and robust semantics by smoothing relations around the target interaction. By maximizing the mutual information between reliable structure and smoothed relations, BioKDN emphasizes informative semantics to enable precise predictions. Experimental results on real-world datasets show that BioKDN surpasses state-of-the-art models in DTI and DDI prediction tasks, confirming the effectiveness and robustness of BioKDN in denoising unreliable interactions within contaminated KGs