A deep learning model for anti-inflammatory peptides identification based on deep variational autoencoder and contrastive learning.

Journal: Scientific reports
PMID:

Abstract

As a class of biologically active molecules with significant immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects, anti-inflammatory peptides have important application value in the medical and biotechnology fields due to their unique biological functions. Research on the identification of anti-inflammatory peptides provides important theoretical foundations and practical value for a deeper understanding of the biological mechanisms of inflammation and immune regulation, as well as for the development of new drugs and biotechnological applications. Therefore, it is necessary to develop more advanced computational models for identifying anti-inflammatory peptides. In this study, we propose a deep learning model named DAC-AIPs based on variational autoencoder and contrastive learning for accurate identification of anti-inflammatory peptides. In the sequence encoding part, the incorporation of multi-hot encoding helps capture richer sequence information. The autoencoder, composed of convolutional layers and linear layers, can learn latent features and reconstruct features, with variational inference enhancing the representation capability of latent features. Additionally, the introduction of contrastive learning aims to improve the model's classification ability. Through cross-validation and independent dataset testing experiments, DAC-AIPs achieves superior performance compared to existing state-of-the-art models. In cross-validation, the classification accuracy of DAC-AIPs reached around 88%, which is 7% higher than previous models. Furthermore, various ablation experiments and interpretability experiments validate the effectiveness of DAC-AIPs. Finally, a user-friendly online predictor is designed to enhance the practicality of the model, and the server is freely accessible at http://dac-aips.online .

Authors

  • Yujie Xu
    College of Automation, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin, Heilongjiang 150001, China.
  • Shengli Zhang
    Key Laboratory of Animal Genetics, Breeding and Reproduction, Ministry of Agriculture & National Engineering Laboratory for Animal Breeding, College of Animal Science and Technology, China Agricultural University Beijing, China.
  • Feng Zhu
    Department of Critical Care Medicine, Shanghai East Hospital, Tongji University School of Medicine, Shanghai, 200120, People's Republic of China.
  • Yunyun Liang
    School of Mathematics and Statistics, Xidian University, Xi'an 710071, PR China. Electronic address: yunyunliang88@163.com.