AUTHOR=Li Yan , Wang Boran , Liu Zhen , Wei Wei , Fei Caiyi , Xu Shi , Han Tiyun , Geng Wei , Wu Zengding TITLE=TRANSAID: a hybrid deep learning framework for translation site prediction with integrated biological feature scoring JOURNAL=Frontiers in Bioinformatics VOLUME=Volume 5 - 2025 YEAR=2026 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/bioinformatics/articles/10.3389/fbinf.2025.1676149 DOI=10.3389/fbinf.2025.1676149 ISSN=2673-7647 ABSTRACT=IntroductionTranslation initiation and termination are critical regulatory checkpoints in protein synthesis, yet accurate computational prediction of their sites remains challenging due to training data biases and the complexity of full-length transcripts.MethodsTo address these limitations, we present TRANSAID (TRANSlation AI for Detection), a novel deep learning framework that accurately and simultaneously predicts translation initiation (TIS) and termination (TTS) sites from complete transcript sequences. TRANSAID’s hierarchical architecture efficiently processes long transcripts, capturing both local motifs and long-range dependencies. Crucially, the model was trained on a human transcriptome dataset that was rigorously partitioned at the gene level to prevent data leakage and included both protein-coding (NM) and non-coding (NR) transcripts.ResultsThis mixed-training strategy enables TRANSAID to achieve high fidelity, correctly identifying 73.61% of NR transcripts as non-coding. Performance is further enhanced by an integrated biological scoring system, improving “perfect ORF prediction” for coding sequences to 94.94% and “correct non-coding prediction” to 82.00%. The human-trained model demonstrates remarkable cross-species applicability, maintaining high accuracy on organisms from mammals to yeast. Beyond annotation, TRANSAID serves as a powerful discovery tool for novel coding events. When applied to long-read sequencing data, it accurately identified previously unannotated protein isoforms validated by mass spectrometry (76.28% validation rate). Furthermore, homology searches of high-scoring ORFs predicted within NR transcripts suggest a strong potential for identifying cryptic translation events.DiscussionAs a fully documented open-source tool with a user-friendly web server, TRANSAID provides a powerful and accessible resource for improving transcriptome annotation and proteomic discovery.