Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Butler G" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Ion channel classification through machine learning and protein language model embeddings Ghazikhani H; Butler G; 39572876
ENCS
2 SPOT: A machine learning model that predicts specific substrates for transport proteins Kroll A; Niebuhr N; Butler G; Lercher MJ; 39325691
ENCS
3 Comparative genomic analysis of thermophilic fungi reveals convergent evolutionary adaptations and gene losses Steindorff AS; Aguilar-Pontes MV; Robinson AJ; Andreopoulos B; LaButti K; Kuo A; Mondo S; Riley R; Otillar R; Haridas S; Lipzen A; Grimwood J; Schmutz J; Clum A; Reid ID; Moisan MC; Butler G; Nguyen TTM; Dewar K; Conant G; Drula E; Henrissat B; Hansel C; Singer S; Hutchinson MI; de Vries RP; Natvig DO; Powell AJ; Tsang A; Grigoriev IV; 39266695
CSFG
4 Exploiting protein language models for the precise classification of ion channels and ion transporters Ghazikhani H; Butler G; 38656743
CSFG
5 Enhanced identification of membrane transport proteins: a hybrid approach combining ProtBERT-BFD and convolutional neural networks Ghazikhani H; Butler G; 37497772
ENCS
6 Integrative approach for detecting membrane proteins. Alballa M, Butler G 33349234
CSFG
7 BENIN: Biologically enhanced network inference. Wonkap SK, Butler G 32698722
ENCS
8 TooT-T: discrimination of transport proteins from non-transport proteins. Alballa M, Butler G 32321420
CSFG
9 TranCEP: Predicting the substrate class of transmembrane transport proteins using compositional, evolutionary, and positional information. Alballa M, Aplop F, Butler G 31935244
CSFG
10 Analytical and computational approaches to define the Aspergillus niger secretome. Tsang A, Butler G, Powlowski J, Panisko EA, Baker SE 19618504
BIOLOGY
11 SnowyOwl: accurate prediction of fungal genes by using RNA-Seq and homology information to select among ab initio models. Reid I, O'Toole N, Zabaneh O, Nourzadeh R, Dahdouli M, Abdellateef M, Gordon PM, Soh J, Butler G, Sensen CW, Tsang A 24980894
CSFG
12 Machine learning for biomedical literature triage. Almeida H, Meurs MJ, Kosseim L, Butler G, Tsang A 25551575
CSFG
13 mycoCLAP, the database for characterized lignocellulose-active proteins of fungal origin: resource and text mining curation support. Strasser K, McDonnell E, Nyaga C, Wu M, Wu S, Almeida H, Meurs MJ, Kosseim L, Powlowski J, Butler G, Tsang A 25754864
CSFG
14 An Adaptive Defect Weighted Sampling Algorithm to Design Pseudoknotted RNA Secondary Structures. Zandi K, Butler G, Kharma N 27499762
CSFG

 

Title:Exploiting protein language models for the precise classification of ion channels and ion transporters
Authors:Ghazikhani HButler G
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38656743/
DOI:10.1002/prot.26694
Publication:Proteins
Keywords:deep learningdrug discoveryion channelsion transportersmembrane proteinsprotein language models
PMID:38656743 Category: Date Added:2024-04-24
Dept Affiliation: CSFG
1 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
2 Centre for Structural and Functional Genomics, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

This study introduces TooT-PLM-ionCT, a comprehensive framework that consolidates three distinct systems, each meticulously tailored for one of the following tasks: distinguishing ion channels (ICs) from membrane proteins (MPs), segregating ion transporters (ITs) from MPs, and differentiating ICs from ITs. Drawing upon the strengths of six Protein Language Models (PLMs)-ProtBERT, ProtBERT-BFD, ESM-1b, ESM-2 (650M parameters), and ESM-2 (15B parameters), TooT-PLM-ionCT employs a combination of traditional classifiers and deep learning models for nuanced protein classification. Originally validated on an existing dataset by previous researchers, our systems demonstrated superior performance in identifying ITs from MPs and distinguishing ICs from ITs, with the IC-MP discrimination achieving state-of-the-art results. In light of recommendations for additional validation, we introduced a new dataset, significantly enhancing the robustness and generalization of our models across bioinformatics challenges. This new evaluation underscored the effectiveness of TooT-PLM-ionCT in adapting to novel data while maintaining high classification accuracy. Furthermore, this study explores critical factors affecting classification accuracy, such as dataset balancing, the impact of using frozen versus fine-tuned PLM representations, and the variance between half and full precision in floating-point computations. To facilitate broader application and accessibility, a web server (https://tootsuite.encs.concordia.ca/service/TooT-PLM-ionCT) has been developed, allowing users to evaluate unknown protein sequences through our specialized systems for IC-MP, IT-MP, and IC-IT classification tasks.





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