University of Toronto researchers build peptide prediction model that beats AlphaFold 2

June 28, 2024

  • University of Toronto researchers built an AI model to predict peptide shapes
  • It beats Google DeepMind's AlphaFold 2 for peptide structure prediction
  • Peptides are used in drug development, including the obesity drug Ozempic
peptide

Scientists at the University of Toronto’s Donelly Centre have developed a cutting-edge AI model called PepFlow that can predict the diverse shapes that peptides adopt with unprecedented accuracy. 

Peptides are small molecules made up of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. 

While peptides are similar to proteins, they’re much smaller and more flexible, allowing them to fold into a huge variety of shapes. 

A peptide’s specific shape is crucial because it determines how it interacts with other molecules in the body, which in turn dictates its biological function.

Predicting the structures of proteins and peptides has been a longstanding challenge in biology. Due to the complex math involved, it’s an excellent problem for machine learning. 

In recent years, AI models like AlphaFold 2 and 3, developed by Google’s DeepMind, have revolutionized protein structure prediction. 

AlphaFold2 uses deep learning to predict a protein’s most likely 3D structure based on its amino acid sequence. But while AlphaFold2 has been incredibly successful for proteins, it has limitations when it comes to highly flexible molecules like peptides.

“We haven’t been able to model the full range of conformations for peptides until now,” said Osama Abdin, the study’s first author.

Pepflow, documented in a study published in Nature Machine Intelligence, “leverages deep-learning to capture the precise and accurate conformations of a peptide within minutes.”

PepFlow employs AI models inspired by Boltzmann generators. These models learn the fundamental physical principles that govern how a peptide’s chemical structure determines its spectrum of possible shapes. 

This allows PepFlow to accurately predict the structures of peptides with unusual features, such as circular peptides formed through macrocyclization. Macrocyclic peptides are particularly interesting for drug development due to their unique binding properties.

What sets PepFlow apart from models like AlphaFold2 is its ability to predict not just one structure, but the entire “energy landscape” of a peptide. 

The energy landscape represents all the possible shapes a peptide can take and how it transitions between these different conformations.

Capturing this structural complexity is key to understanding how peptides function in different biological contexts.

Significance

The ability to predict highly accurate peptide structures has major implications for developing peptide-based therapeutics. 

“Peptides were the focus of the PepFlow model because they are very important biological molecules and they are naturally very dynamic, so we need to model their different conformations to understand their function,” explained Philip M. Kim, the study’s lead investigator. 

“They’re also important as therapeutics, as can be seen by the GLP1 analogues, like Ozempic, used to treat diabetes and obesity.”

Peptide drugs have several advantages over traditional small-molecule drugs and larger protein-based therapeutics. They’re more specific in their actions, have lower toxicity than small-molecule drugs, and are cheaper and easier to produce than larger protein drugs. 

PepFlow could accelerate the discovery and development of new peptide-based medicines by enabling the design of peptides with therapeutic properties.

“It took two-and-a-half years to develop PepFlow and one month to train it, but it was worthwhile to move to the next frontier, beyond models that only predict one structure of a peptide,” concluded Abdin.

This follows the release of EvolutionaryScale ESM3 this week, a frontier generative model for biology, which also focuses on proteins.

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Sam Jeans

Sam is a science and technology writer who has worked in various AI startups. When he’s not writing, he can be found reading medical journals or digging through boxes of vinyl records.

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