ICLR2026
SAIR: Enabling Deep Learning for Protein-Ligand Interactions with a Synthetic Structural Dataset
Pablo Lemos, Zane Beckwith, Sasaank Bandi, Maarten Van Damme, Jordan Crivelli-Decker, Benjamin J. Shields, Thomas Merth, Punit K Jha, Nicola De Mitri, Tiffany Callahan, AJ Nish, Paul Abruzzo, Romelia Salomon-Ferrer, Martin Ganahl
被引用 13 次
摘要
Accurate prediction of protein-ligand binding affinities remains a cornerstone problem in drug discovery. While binding affinity is inherently dictated by the 3D structure and dynamics of protein-ligand complexes, current deep learning approaches are limited by the lack of high-quality experimental structures with annotated binding affinities. To address this limitation, we introduce the Structurally Augmented IC50 Repository (SAIR), the largest publicly available dataset of protein-ligand 3D structures with associated activity data. The dataset comprises structures across unique protein-ligand systems, curated from the ChEMBL and BindingDB databases, which were then computationally folded using the Boltz-1x model. We provide a comprehensive characterization of the dataset, including distributional statistics of proteins and ligands, and evaluate the structural fidelity of the folded complexes using PoseBusters. Our analysis reveals that approximately of structures exhibit physical anomalies, predominantly related to internal energy violations. As an initial demonstration, we benchmark several binding affinity prediction methods, including empirical scoring functions (Vina, Vinardo), a 3D convolutional neural network (Onionnet-2), and a graph neural network (AEV-PLIG). While machine learning-based models consistently outperform traditional scoring function methods, neither exhibit a high correlation with ground truth affinities, highlighting the need for models specifically fine-tuned to synthetic structure distributions. This work provides a foundation for developing and evaluating next-generation structure and binding-affinity prediction models and offers insights into the structural and physical underpinnings of protein-ligand interactions. The link to the data will be added upon publication, to preserve anonymity of the submission.