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Meta-learning-based Inductive logistic matrix completion for prediction of kinase inhibitors.

Protein kinases become an important source of potential drug targets. Developing new, efficient, and safe small-molecule kinase inhibitors has become an important topic in the field of drug research and development. In contrast with traditional wet experiments which are time-consuming and expensive, machine learning-based approaches for predicting small molecule inhibitors for protein kinases are time-saving and cost-effective, which are highly desired for us. However, the issue of sample scarcity (known active and inactive compounds are usually limited for most kinases) poses a challenge to the research and development of machine learning-based kinase inhibitors' active prediction methods. To alleviate the data scarcity problem in the prediction of kinase inhibitors, in this study, we present a novel Meta-learning-based inductive logistic matrix completion method for the Prediction of Kinase Inhibitors (MetaILMC). MetaILMC adopts a meta-learning framework to learn a well-generalized model from tasks with sufficient samples, which can fast adapt to new tasks with limited samples. As MetaILMC allows the effective transfer of the prior knowledge learned from kinases with sufficient samples to kinases with a small number of samples, the proposed model can produce accurate predictions for kinases with limited data. Experimental results show that MetaILMC has excellent performance for prediction tasks of kinases with few-shot samples and is significantly superior to the state-of-the-art multi-task learning in terms of AUC, AUPR, etc., various performance metrics. Case studies also provided for two drugs to predict Kinase Inhibitory scores, further validating the proposed method's effectiveness and feasibility. SCIENTIFIC CONTRIBUTION: Considering the potential correlation between activity prediction tasks for different kinases, we propose a novel meta learning algorithm MetaILMC, which learns a prior of strong generalization capacity during meta-training from the tasks with sufficient training samples, such that it can be easily and quickly adapted to the new tasks of the kinase with scarce data during meta-testing. Thus, MetaILMC can effectively alleviate the data scarcity problem in the prediction of kinase inhibitors.

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