PaperPlayer biorxiv bioinformatics podcast

Can a Sparse 29 x 29 Pixel Chaos Game Representation Predict Protein Binding Sites using Fine-Tuned State-of-the Art Deep Learning Semantic Segmentation Models?

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Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.08.04.410498v1?rss=1 Authors: Dick, K., Green, J. R. Abstract: No. While our experiments ultimately failed, this work was motivated by the seemingly reasonable hypothesis that encoding protein sequences as a fractal-based image in combination with a binary mask identifying those pixels representative of the protein binding interface could effectively be used to fine-tune a semantic segmentation model. We were wrong. Despite the shortcomings of this work, a number of insights were drawn, inspiring discussion about how this fractal-based space may be exploited to generate effective protein binding site predictors in the future. Furthermore, these realizations promise to orient complimentary studies leveraging fractal-based representations, whether in the field of bioinformatics, or more broadly within disparate fields leveraging sequence-type data, such as Natural Language Processing. In a non-traditional way, this work presents the experimental design undertaken and interleaves various insights and limitations. It is the hope of this work that those interested in leveraging fractal-based representations and deep learning architectures as part of their work will benefit from the insights arising from this work. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC

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