A Simple yet Effective $\Delta\Delta G$ Predictor is An Unsupervised Antibody Optimizer and Explainer

Published: 22 Jan 2025, Last Modified: 13 Feb 2025ICLR 2025 PosterEveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY 4.0
Keywords: Mutation Effect Prediction, Mutation Preference Explanation, Unsupervised Protein Evolution
Abstract: The proteins that exist today have been optimized over billions of years of natural evolution, during which nature creates random mutations and selects them. The discovery of functionally promising mutations is challenged by the limited evolutionary accessible regions, i.e., only a small region on the fitness landscape is beneficial. There have been numerous priors used to constrain protein evolution to regions of landscapes with high-fitness variants, among which the change in binding free energy ($\Delta\Delta G$) of protein complexes upon mutations is one of the most commonly used priors. However, the huge mutation space poses two challenges: (1) how to improve the efficiency of $\Delta\Delta G$ prediction for fast mutation screening; and (2) how to explain mutation preferences and efficiently explore accessible evolutionary regions. To address these challenges, we propose a lightweight $\Delta\Delta G$ predictor (Light-DDG), which adopts a structure-aware Transformer as the backbone and enhances it by knowledge distilled from existing powerful but computationally heavy $\Delta\Delta G$ predictors. Additionally, we augmented, annotated, and released a large-scale dataset containing millions of mutation data for pre-training Light-DDG. We find that such a simple yet effective Light-DDG can serve as a good unsupervised antibody optimizer and explainer. For the target antibody, we propose a novel Mutation Explainer to learn mutation preferences, which accounts for the marginal benefit of each mutation per residue. To further explore accessible evolutionary regions, we conduct preference-guided antibody optimization and evaluate antibody candidates quickly using Light-DDG to identify desirable mutations. Extensive experiments have demonstrated the effectiveness of Light-DDG in terms of test generalizability, noise robustness, and inference practicality, e.g., 89.7$\times$ inference acceleration and 15.45\% performance gains over previous state-of-the-art baselines. A case study of SARS-CoV-2 further demonstrates the crucial role of Light-DDG for mutation explanation and antibody optimization.
Primary Area: applications to physical sciences (physics, chemistry, biology, etc.)
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Submission Number: 9435
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