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Abstract MotivationWhile traditionally utilized for identifying site-specific metabolic activity within a compound to alter its interaction with a metabolizing enzyme, predicting the site-of-metabolism (SOM) is essential in analyzing the promiscuity of enzymes on substrates. The successful prediction of SOMs and the relevant promiscuous products has a wide range of applications that include creating extended metabolic models (EMMs) that account for enzyme promiscuity and the construction of novel heterologous synthesis pathways. There is therefore a need to develop generalized methods that can predict molecular SOMs for a wide range of metabolizing enzymes. ResultsThis article develops a Graph Neural Network (GNN) model for the classification of an atom (or a bond) being an SOM. Our model, GNN-SOM, is trained on enzymatic interactions, available in the KEGG database, that span all enzyme commission numbers. We demonstrate that GNN-SOM consistently outperforms baseline machine learning models, when trained on all enzymes, on Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, or on non-CYP enzymes. We showcase the utility of GNN-SOM in prioritizing predicted enzymatic products due to enzyme promiscuity for two biological applications: the construction of EMMs and the construction of synthesis pathways. Availability and implementationA python implementation of the trained SOM predictor model can be found at https://github.com/HassounLab/GNN-SOM. Supplementary informationSupplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.more » « less
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Porokhin, Vladimir; Amin, Sara A.; Nicks, Trevor B.; Gopinarayanan, Venkatesh Endalur; Nair, Nikhil U.; Hassoun, Soha (, Metabolic Engineering Communications)null (Ed.)
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