Evaluating molecular representations in machine learning models for drug response prediction and interpretability.

Journal: Journal of integrative bioinformatics
Published Date:

Abstract

Machine learning (ML) is increasingly being used to guide drug discovery processes. When applying ML approaches to chemical datasets, molecular descriptors and fingerprints are typically used to represent compounds as numerical vectors. However, in recent years, end-to-end deep learning (DL) methods that can learn feature representations directly from line notations or molecular graphs have been proposed as alternatives to using precomputed features. This study set out to investigate which compound representation methods are the most suitable for drug sensitivity prediction in cancer cell lines. Twelve different representations were benchmarked on 5 compound screening datasets, using DeepMol, a new chemoinformatics package developed by our research group, to perform these analyses. The results of this study show that the predictive performance of end-to-end DL models is comparable to, and at times surpasses, that of models trained on molecular fingerprints, even when less training data is available. This study also found that combining several compound representation methods into an ensemble can improve performance. Finally, we show that a feature attribution method can boost the explainability of the DL models.

Authors

  • Delora Baptista
    Biomedical Engineering at the University of Minho.
  • João Correia
    CISUC, Department of Informatics Engineering, University of Coimbra, Portugal.
  • Bruno Pereira
    Centre of Biological Engineering, University of Minho, Campus of Gualtar, Braga, Portugal.
  • Miguel Rocha