Machine-learning scoring functions trained on complexes dissimilar to the test set already outperform classical counterparts on a blind benchmark.

Journal: Briefings in bioinformatics
Published Date:

Abstract

The superior performance of machine-learning scoring functions for docking has caused a series of debates on whether it is due to learning knowledge from training data that are similar in some sense to the test data. With a systematically revised methodology and a blind benchmark realistically mimicking the process of prospective prediction of binding affinity, we have evaluated three broadly used classical scoring functions and five machine-learning counterparts calibrated with both random forest and extreme gradient boosting using both solo and hybrid features, showing for the first time that machine-learning scoring functions trained exclusively on a proportion of as low as 8% complexes dissimilar to the test set already outperform classical scoring functions, a percentage that is far lower than what has been recently reported on all the three CASF benchmarks. The performance of machine-learning scoring functions is underestimated due to the absence of similar samples in some artificially created training sets that discard the full spectrum of complexes to be found in a prospective environment. Given the inevitability of any degree of similarity contained in a large dataset, the criteria for scoring function selection depend on which one can make the best use of all available materials. Software code and data are provided at https://github.com/cusdulab/MLSF for interested readers to rapidly rebuild the scoring functions and reproduce our results, even to make extended analyses on their own benchmarks.

Authors

  • Hongjian Li
    Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
  • Gang Lu
    Innovation Research Institute of Combined Acupuncture and Medicine, Shaanxi University of CM, Xianyang 712046, China; Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Combined Acupuncture and Medicine, Xianyang 712046.
  • Kam-Heung Sze
    Bioinformatics Unit, Hong Kong Medical Technology Institute, Hong Kong.
  • Xianwei Su
    Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
  • Wai-Yee Chan
    CUHK-SDU Joint Laboratory on Reproductive Genetics, School of Biomedical Sciences, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
  • Kwong-Sak Leung
    Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.