ALDELE: All-Purpose Deep Learning Toolkits for Predicting the Biocatalytic Activities of Enzymes.

Journal: Journal of chemical information and modeling
Published Date:

Abstract

Rapidly predicting enzyme properties for catalyzing specific substrates is essential for identifying potential enzymes for industrial transformations. The demand for sustainable production of valuable industry chemicals utilizing biological resources raised a pressing need to speed up biocatalyst screening using machine learning techniques. In this research, we developed an all-purpose deep-learning-based multiple-toolkit (ALDELE) workflow for screening enzyme catalysts. ALDELE incorporates both structural and sequence representations of proteins, alongside representations of ligands by subgraphs and overall physicochemical properties. Comprehensive evaluation demonstrated that ALDELE can predict the catalytic activities of enzymes, and particularly, it identifies residue-based hotspots to guide enzyme engineering and generates substrate heat maps to explore the substrate scope for a given biocatalyst. Moreover, our models notably match empirical data, reinforcing the practicality and reliability of our approach through the alignment with confirmed mutation sites. ALDELE offers a facile and comprehensive solution by integrating different toolkits tailored for different purposes at affordable computational cost and therefore would be valuable to speed up the discovery of new functional enzymes for their exploitation by the industry.

Authors

  • Xiangwen Wang
    College of Computer Science and Engineering, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou, 730070, People's Republic of China.
  • Derek Quinn
    Department of Biocatalysis and Isotope Chemistry, Almac Sciences, Craigavon BT63 5QD, Northern Ireland, U.K.
  • Thomas S Moody
    Department of Biocatalysis and Isotope Chemistry, Almac Sciences, Craigavon BT63 5QD, Northern Ireland, U.K.
  • Meilan Huang
    School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Queen's University Belfast, David Keir Building, Stranmillis Road, Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.