CopulaNet: Learning residue co-evolution directly from multiple sequence alignment for protein structure prediction.

Journal: Nature communications
Published Date:

Abstract

Residue co-evolution has become the primary principle for estimating inter-residue distances of a protein, which are crucially important for predicting protein structure. Most existing approaches adopt an indirect strategy, i.e., inferring residue co-evolution based on some hand-crafted features, say, a covariance matrix, calculated from multiple sequence alignment (MSA) of target protein. This indirect strategy, however, cannot fully exploit the information carried by MSA. Here, we report an end-to-end deep neural network, CopulaNet, to estimate residue co-evolution directly from MSA. The key elements of CopulaNet include: (i) an encoder to model context-specific mutation for each residue; (ii) an aggregator to model residue co-evolution, and thereafter estimate inter-residue distances. Using CASP13 (the 13th Critical Assessment of Protein Structure Prediction) target proteins as representatives, we demonstrate that CopulaNet can predict protein structure with improved accuracy and efficiency. This study represents a step toward improved end-to-end prediction of inter-residue distances and protein tertiary structures.

Authors

  • Fusong Ju
    Key Lab of Intelligent Information Processing, Institute of Computing Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
  • Jianwei Zhu
    College of Food Science and Engineering, Jilin Agricultural University, Changchun 130118, China.
  • Bin Shao
    Microsoft Research Asia, Beijing, China.
  • Lupeng Kong
    Key Lab of Intelligent Information Processing, State Key Lab of Computer Architecture, Big-data Academy, Institute of Computing Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
  • Tie-Yan Liu
    Microsoft Research Asia, Beijing 100080, China.
  • Wei-Mou Zheng
    Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China. zheng@itp.ac.cn.
  • Dongbo Bu
    Key Lab of Intelligent Information Process, Institute of Computing Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.