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Oral
in
Workshop: Machine Learning in Structural Biology Workshop

Validation of de novo designed water-soluble and membrane proteins by in silico folding and melting.

Alvaro Martin · Carolin Berner · Sergey Ovchinnikov · Anastassia Vorobieva

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presentation: Machine Learning in Structural Biology Workshop
Fri 15 Dec 6:30 a.m. PST — 3:05 p.m. PST

Abstract:

In silico validation of de novo designed proteins withdeep learning (DL)-based structure prediction algorithms has becomemainstream. However, formal evidence that high-confidence predictions lead to higher chances of experimental success is lacking. We used experimentally characterized \emph{de novo} designs to show that AlphaFold2 and ESMFold excel at different tasks. ESMFold can identify designs generated based on high-quality (designable) backbones. However, only AlphaFold2 can predict which sequences are more likely to folding among similar designs. We show that ESMFold can predict high-quality structures from just a few contacts and introduce a new approach based on incremental perturbation of the prediction ("in silico melting"), which can reveal differences in the presence of favorable contacts between designs. This study provides a new insight on DL-based structure prediction models explainability and on how they could be leveraged for the design of increasingly complex proteins; in particular membrane proteins which still lack many basic in silico design and validation tools.

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