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Predicting protein functions by applying predicate logic to biomedical literature.

BMC Bioinformatics 2019 Februrary 9
BACKGROUND: A large number of computational methods have been proposed for predicting protein functions. The underlying techniques adopted by most of these methods revolve around predicting the functions of an unannotated protein p from already annotated proteins that have similar characteristics as p. Recent Information Extraction methods take advantage of the huge growth of biomedical literature to predict protein functions. They extract biological molecule terms that directly describe protein functions from biomedical texts. However, they consider only explicitly mentioned terms that co-occur with proteins in texts. We observe that some important biological molecule terms pertaining functional categories may implicitly co-occur with proteins in texts. Therefore, the methods that rely solely on explicitly mentioned terms in texts may miss vital functional information implicitly mentioned in the texts.

RESULTS: To overcome the limitations of methods that rely solely on explicitly mentioned terms in texts to predict protein functions, we propose in this paper an Information Extraction system called PL-PPF. The proposed system employs techniques for predicting the functions of proteins based on their co-occurrences with explicitly and implicitly mentioned biological molecule terms that pertain functional categories in biomedical literature. That is, PL-PPF employs a combination of statistical-based explicit term extraction techniques and logic-based implicit term extraction techniques. The statistical component of PL-PPF predicts some of the functions of a protein by extracting the explicitly mentioned functional terms that directly describe the functions of the protein from the biomedical texts associated with the protein. The logic-based component of PL-PPF predicts additional functions of the protein by inferring the functional terms that co-occur implicitly with the protein in the biomedical texts associated with it. First, the system employs its statistical-based component to extract the explicitly mentioned functional terms. Then, it employs its logic-based component to infer additional functions of the protein. Our hypothesis is that important biological molecule terms pertaining functional categories of proteins are likely to co-occur implicitly with the proteins in biomedical texts. We evaluated PL-PPF experimentally and compared it with five systems. Results revealed better prediction performance.

CONCLUSIONS: The experimental results showed that PL-PPF outperformed the other five systems. This is an indication of the effectiveness and practical viability of PL-PPF's combination of explicit and implicit techniques. We also evaluated two versions of PL-PPF: one adopting the complete techniques (i.e., adopting both the implicit and explicit techniques) and the other adopting only the explicit terms co-occurrence extraction techniques (i.e., without the inference rules for predicate logic). The experimental results showed that the complete version outperformed significantly the other version. This is attributed to the effectiveness of the rules of predicate logic to infer functional terms that co-occur implicitly with proteins in biomedical texts. A demo application of PL-PPF can be accessed through the following link: https://ecesrvr.kustar.ac.ae:8080/plppf/.

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