A network-based method for brain disease gene prediction by integrating brain connectome and molecular network

Author:

Wang Wei12,Han Ruijiang12,Zhang Menghan12,Wang Yuxian12,Wang Tao12,Wang Yongtian12,Shang Xuequn12,Peng Jiajie12

Affiliation:

1. School of Computer Science, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi’an, 710072, China

2. Key Laboratory of Big Data Storage and Management, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Xi’an, 710072, China

Abstract

Abstract Brain disease gene identification is critical for revealing the biological mechanism and developing drugs for brain diseases. To enhance the identification of brain disease genes, similarity-based computational methods, especially network-based methods, have been adopted for narrowing down the searching space. However, these network-based methods only use molecular networks, ignoring brain connectome data, which have been widely used in many brain-related studies. In our study, we propose a novel framework, named brainMI, for integrating brain connectome data and molecular-based gene association networks to predict brain disease genes. For the consistent representation of molecular-based network data and brain connectome data, brainMI first constructs a novel gene network, called brain functional connectivity (BFC)-based gene network, based on resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data and brain region-specific gene expression data. Then, a multiple network integration method is proposed to learn low-dimensional features of genes by integrating the BFC-based gene network and existing protein–protein interaction networks. Finally, these features are utilized to predict brain disease genes based on a support vector machine-based model. We evaluate brainMI on four brain diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, major depressive disorder and autism. brainMI achieves of 0.761, 0.729, 0.728 and 0.744 using the BFC-based gene network alone and enhances the molecular network-based performance by 6.3% on average. In addition, the results show that brainMI achieves higher performance in predicting brain disease genes compared to the existing three state-of-the-art methods.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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