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Predicting associations between drugs and G protein-coupled receptors using a multi-graph convolutional network.

Developing new drugs is an expensive, time-consuming process that frequently involves safety concerns. By discovering novel uses for previously verified drugs, drug repurposing helps to bypass the time-consuming and costly process of drug development. As the largest family of proteins targeted by verified drugs, G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) are vital to efficiently repurpose drugs by inferring their associations with drugs. Drug repurposing may be sped up by computational models that predict the strength of novel drug-GPCR pairs interaction. To this end, a number of models have been put forth. In existing methods, however, drug structure, drug-drug interactions, GPCR sequence, and subfamily information couldn't simultaneously be taken into account to detect novel drugs-GPCR relationships. In this study, based on a multi-graph convolutional network, an end-to-end deep model was developed to efficiently and precisely discover latent drug-GPCR relationships by combining data from multi-sources. We demonstrated that our model, based on multi-graph convolutional networks, outperformed rival deep learning techniques as well as non-deep learning models in terms of inferring drug-GPCR relationships. Our results indicated that integrating data from multi-sources can lead to further advancement.

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