MSA-Regularized Protein Sequence Transformer toward Predicting Genome-Wide Chemical-Protein Interactions: Application to GPCRome Deorphanization.

Journal: Journal of chemical information and modeling
Published Date:

Abstract

Small molecules play a critical role in modulating biological systems. Knowledge of chemical-protein interactions helps address fundamental and practical questions in biology and medicine. However, with the rapid emergence of newly sequenced genes, the endogenous or surrogate ligands of a vast number of proteins remain unknown. Homology modeling and machine learning are two major methods for assigning new ligands to a protein but mostly fail when sequence homology between an unannotated protein and those with known functions or structures is low. In this study, we develop a new deep learning framework to predict chemical binding to evolutionary divergent unannotated proteins, whose ligand cannot be reliably predicted by existing methods. By incorporating evolutionary information into self-supervised learning of unlabeled protein sequences, we develop a novel method, distilled sequence alignment embedding (DISAE), for the protein sequence representation. DISAE can utilize all protein sequences and their multiple sequence alignment (MSA) to capture functional relationships between proteins without the knowledge of their structure and function. Followed by the DISAE pretraining, we devise a module-based fine-tuning strategy for the supervised learning of chemical-protein interactions. In the benchmark studies, DISAE significantly improves the generalizability of machine learning models and outperforms the state-of-the-art methods by a large margin. Comprehensive ablation studies suggest that the use of MSA, sequence distillation, and triplet pretraining critically contributes to the success of DISAE. The interpretability analysis of DISAE suggests that it learns biologically meaningful information. We further use DISAE to assign ligands to human orphan G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and to cluster the human GPCRome by integrating their phylogenetic and ligand relationships. The promising results of DISAE open an avenue for exploring the chemical landscape of entire sequenced genomes.

Authors

  • Tian Cai
    Ph.D. Program in Computer Science, The Graduate Center, The City University of New York, New York, New York 10016, United States.
  • Hansaim Lim
  • Kyra Alyssa Abbu
    Department of Computer Science, Hunter College, The City University of New York, New York, New York 10065, United States.
  • Yue Qiu
    Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
  • Ruth Nussinov
    Computational Structural Biology Section, Basic Science Program, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute at Frederick, Frederick, MD 21702, USA.
  • Lei Xie
    Ph.D. Program in Computer Science, The City University of New York, New York, NY, United States.