Frontiers in Microbiology (Dec 2024)

Predicting microbe-disease associations via graph neural network and contrastive learning

  • Cong Jiang,
  • Cong Jiang,
  • Junxuan Feng,
  • Junxuan Feng,
  • Bingshen Shan,
  • Bingshen Shan,
  • Qiyue Chen,
  • Jian Yang,
  • Jian Yang,
  • Gang Wang,
  • Gang Wang,
  • Xiaogang Peng,
  • Xiaozheng Li,
  • Xiaozheng Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2024.1483983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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In the contemporary field of life sciences, researchers have gradually recognized the critical role of microbes in maintaining human health. However, traditional biological experimental methods for validating the association between microbes and diseases are both time-consuming and costly. Therefore, developing effective computational methods to predict potential associations between microbes and diseases is an important and urgent task. In this study, we propose a novel computational framework, called GCATCMDA, for forecasting potential associations between microbes and diseases. Firstly, we construct Gaussian kernel similarity networks for microbes and diseases using known microbe-disease association data. Then, we design a feature encoder that combines graph convolutional network and graph attention mechanism to learn the node features of networks, and propose a feature dual-fusion module to effectively integrate node features from each layer's output. Next, we apply the feature encoder separately to the microbe similarity network, disease similarity network, and microbe-disease association network, and enhance the consistency of features for the same nodes across different association networks through contrastive learning. Finally, we pass the microbe and disease features into an inner product decoder to obtain the association scores between them. Experimental results demonstrate that the GCATCMDA model achieves superior predictive performance compared to previous methods. Furthermore, case studies confirm that GCATCMDA is an effective tool for predicting microbe-disease associations in real situations.

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