Author: Zeng, Yuni; Chen, Xiangru; Luo, Yujie; Li, Xuedong; Peng, Dezhong
Title: Deep drug-target binding affinity prediction with multiple attention blocks Cord-id: hgdf3ryu Document date: 2021_4_19
ID: hgdf3ryu
Snippet: Drug-target interaction (DTI) prediction has drawn increasing interest due to its substantial position in the drug discovery process. Many studies have introduced computational models to treat DTI prediction as a regression task, which directly predict the binding affinity of drug-target pairs. However, existing studies (i) ignore the essential correlations between atoms when encoding drug compounds and (ii) model the interaction of drug-target pairs simply by concatenation. Based on those obser
Document: Drug-target interaction (DTI) prediction has drawn increasing interest due to its substantial position in the drug discovery process. Many studies have introduced computational models to treat DTI prediction as a regression task, which directly predict the binding affinity of drug-target pairs. However, existing studies (i) ignore the essential correlations between atoms when encoding drug compounds and (ii) model the interaction of drug-target pairs simply by concatenation. Based on those observations, in this study, we propose an end-to-end model with multiple attention blocks to predict the binding affinity scores of drug-target pairs. Our proposed model offers the abilities to (i) encode the correlations between atoms by a relation-aware self-attention block and (ii) model the interaction of drug representations and target representations by the multi-head attention block. Experimental results of DTI prediction on two benchmark datasets show our approach outperforms existing methods, which are benefit from the correlation information encoded by the relation-aware self-attention block and the interaction information extracted by the multi-head attention block. Moreover, we conduct the experiments on the effects of max relative position length and find out the best max relative position length value [Formula: see text]. Furthermore, we apply our model to predict the binding affinity of Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related genome sequences and [Formula: see text] FDA-approved drugs.
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