Design of Ligand-Binding Proteins with Atomic Flow Matching

Designing novel proteins that bind to small molecules is a long-standing challenge in computational biology, with applications in developing catalysts, biosensors, and more. Current computational methods rely on the assumption that the binding pose of the target molecule is known, which is not alway...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2024-09
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Junqi, Li, Shaoning, Shi, Chence, Yang, Zhi, Tang, Jian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Designing novel proteins that bind to small molecules is a long-standing challenge in computational biology, with applications in developing catalysts, biosensors, and more. Current computational methods rely on the assumption that the binding pose of the target molecule is known, which is not always feasible, as conformations of novel targets are often unknown and tend to change upon binding. In this work, we formulate proteins and molecules as unified biotokens, and present AtomFlow, a novel deep generative model under the flow-matching framework for the design of ligand-binding proteins from the 2D target molecular graph alone. Operating on representative atoms of biotokens, AtomFlow captures the flexibility of ligands and generates ligand conformations and protein backbone structures iteratively. We consider the multi-scale nature of biotokens and demonstrate that AtomFlow can be effectively trained on a subset of structures from the Protein Data Bank, by matching flow vector field using an SE(3) equivariant structure prediction network. Experimental results show that our method can generate high fidelity ligand-binding proteins and achieve performance comparable to the state-of-the-art model RFDiffusionAA, while not requiring bound ligand structures. As a general framework, AtomFlow holds the potential to be applied to various biomolecule generation tasks in the future.
ISSN:2331-8422