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arxiv: 2503.04362 · v1 · pith:ITWXIZUI · submitted 2025-03-06 · cs.LG · cs.AI· q-bio.BM

A Generalist Cross-Domain Molecular Learning Framework for Structure-Based Drug Discovery

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classification cs.LG cs.AIq-bio.BM
keywords molecularbiochemicalcross-domaindiscoverydrugincludingstructure-basedvarious
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Structure-based drug discovery (SBDD) is a systematic scientific process that develops new drugs by leveraging the detailed physical structure of the target protein. Recent advancements in pre-trained models for biomolecules have demonstrated remarkable success across various biochemical applications, including drug discovery and protein engineering. However, in most approaches, the pre-trained models primarily focus on the characteristics of either small molecules or proteins, without delving into their binding interactions which are essential cross-domain relationships pivotal to SBDD. To fill this gap, we propose a general-purpose foundation model named BIT (an abbreviation for Biomolecular Interaction Transformer), which is capable of encoding a range of biochemical entities, including small molecules, proteins, and protein-ligand complexes, as well as various data formats, encompassing both 2D and 3D structures. Specifically, we introduce Mixture-of-Domain-Experts (MoDE) to handle the biomolecules from diverse biochemical domains and Mixture-of-Structure-Experts (MoSE) to capture positional dependencies in the molecular structures. The proposed mixture-of-experts approach enables BIT to achieve both deep fusion and domain-specific encoding, effectively capturing fine-grained molecular interactions within protein-ligand complexes. Then, we perform cross-domain pre-training on the shared Transformer backbone via several unified self-supervised denoising tasks. Experimental results on various benchmarks demonstrate that BIT achieves exceptional performance in downstream tasks, including binding affinity prediction, structure-based virtual screening, and molecular property prediction.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

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    DisTrans applies domain adversarial training with structural discrepancy reversal and cross-domain semantic guidance to improve molecular representation transfer, outperforming 16 baselines in two cross-domain setting...