EBioMedicine (Jul 2022)

Predicting the functional effects of voltage-gated potassium channel missense variants with multi-task learning

  • Christian Malte Boßelmann,
  • Ulrike B.S. Hedrich,
  • Peter Müller,
  • Lukas Sonnenberg,
  • Shridhar Parthasarathy,
  • Ingo Helbig,
  • Holger Lerche,
  • Nico Pfeifer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 81
p. 104115

Abstract

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Summary: Background: Variants in genes encoding voltage-gated potassium channels are associated with a broad spectrum of neurological diseases including epilepsy, ataxia, and intellectual disability. Knowledge of the resulting functional changes, characterized as overall ion channel gain- or loss-of-function, is essential to guide clinical management including precision medicine therapies. However, for an increasing number of variants, little to no experimental data is available. New tools are needed to evaluate variant functional effects. Methods: We catalogued a comprehensive dataset of 959 functional experiments across 19 voltage-gated potassium channels, leveraging data from 782 unique disease-associated and synthetic variants. We used these data to train a taxonomy-based multi-task learning support vector machine (MTL-SVM), and compared performance to several baseline methods. Findings: MTL-SVM maintains channel family structure during model training, improving overall predictive performance (mean balanced accuracy 0·718 ± 0·041, AU-ROC 0·761 ± 0·063) over baseline (mean balanced accuracy 0·620 ± 0·045, AU-ROC 0·711 ± 0·022). We can obtain meaningful predictions even for channels with few known variants (KCNC1, KCNQ5). Interpretation: Our model enables functional variant prediction for voltage-gated potassium channels. It may assist in tailoring current and future precision therapies for the increasing number of patients with ion channel disorders. Funding: This work was supported by intramural funding of the Medical Faculty, University of Tuebingen (PATE F.1315137.1), the Federal Ministry for Education and Research (Treat-ION, 01GM1907A/B/G/H) and the German Research Foundation (FOR-2715, Le1030/16-2, He8155/1-2).

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