T-ALPHA: A Hierarchical Transformer-Based Deep Neural Network for Protein-Ligand Binding Affinity Prediction with Uncertainty-Aware Self-Learning for Protein-Specific Alignment.

Journal: Journal of chemical information and modeling
PMID:

Abstract

There is significant interest in targeting disease-causing proteins with small molecule inhibitors to restore healthy cellular states. The ability to accurately predict the binding affinity of small molecules to a protein target in silico enables the rapid identification of candidate inhibitors and facilitates the optimization of on-target potency. In this work, we present T-ALPHA, a novel deep learning model that enhances protein-ligand binding affinity prediction by integrating multimodal feature representations within a hierarchical transformer framework to capture information critical to accurately predicting binding affinity. T-ALPHA outperforms all existing models reported in the literature on multiple benchmarks designed to evaluate protein-ligand binding affinity scoring functions. Remarkably, T-ALPHA maintains state-of-the-art performance when utilizing predicted structures rather than crystal structures, a powerful capability in real-world drug discovery applications where experimentally determined structures are often unavailable or incomplete. Additionally, we present an uncertainty-aware self-learning method for protein-specific alignment that does not require additional experimental data and demonstrate that it improves T-ALPHA's ability to rank compounds by binding affinity to biologically significant targets such as the SARS-CoV-2 main protease and the epidermal growth factor receptor. To facilitate implementation of T-ALPHA and reproducibility of all results presented in this paper, we made all of our software available at https://github.com/gregory-kyro/T-ALPHA.

Authors

  • Gregory W Kyro
    Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511-8499 United States.
  • Anthony M Smaldone
    Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven 06511, Connecticut, United States.
  • Yu Shee
    Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, Unites States.
  • Chuzhi Xu
    Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, Unites States.
  • Victor S Batista
    Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511-8499 United States.