The Isomorphic Labs Drug Design Engine unlocks a new frontier beyond AlphaFold
3 points
1 hour ago
| 1 comment
| isomorphiclabs.com
| HN
nycdatasci
52 minutes ago
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"We demonstrate that our IsoDDE more than doubles the accuracy of AlphaFold 3 on a challenging protein-ligand structure prediction generalisation benchmark, predicts small molecule binding-affinities with accuracies that exceed gold-standard physics-based methods at a fraction of the time and cost, and is able to accurately identify novel binding pockets on target proteins using only the amino acid sequence as input."

It seems like a key challenge here is not just creating a protein that will bind to a specific site, but also ensuring that off-target binding won't happen. Is this feasible? I'm not familiar with this space, but RefSeq [1] shows 442M proteins and the human protein atlas seems to only cover 17.4k [2]. Do we have comprehensive knowledge of human proteins that would allow us to identify off-site affinities?

[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/

[2] https://www.proteinatlas.org/

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