Paper List
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MCP-AI: Protocol-Driven Intelligence Framework for Autonomous Reasoning in Healthcare
This paper addresses the critical gap in healthcare AI systems that lack contextual reasoning, long-term state management, and verifiable workflows by...
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Model Gateway: Model Management Platform for Model-Driven Drug Discovery
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of fragmented, ad-hoc model management in pharmaceutical research by providing a centralized, scalable ML...
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Tree Thinking in the Genomic Era: Unifying Models Across Cells, Populations, and Species
This paper addresses the fragmentation of tree-based inference methods across biological scales by identifying shared algorithmic principles and stati...
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SSDLabeler: Realistic semi-synthetic data generation for multi-label artifact classification in EEG
This paper addresses the core challenge of training robust multi-label EEG artifact classifiers by overcoming the scarcity and limited diversity of ma...
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Decoding Selective Auditory Attention to Musical Elements in Ecologically Valid Music Listening
This paper addresses the core challenge of objectively quantifying listeners' selective attention to specific musical components (e.g., vocals, drums,...
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Physics-Guided Surrogate Modeling for Machine Learning–Driven DLD Design Optimization
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of translating microfluidic DLD devices from research prototypes to clinical applications by replacing weeks-...
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Mechanistic Interpretability of Antibody Language Models Using SAEs
This work addresses the core challenge of achieving both interpretability and controllable generation in domain-specific protein language models, spec...
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Fluctuating Environments Favor Extreme Dormancy Strategies and Penalize Intermediate Ones
This paper addresses the core challenge of determining how organisms should tune dormancy duration to match the temporal autocorrelation of their envi...
Binding Free Energies without Alchemy
Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Curriculum in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core bottleneck of computational expense in Absolute Binding Free Energy calculations by eliminating the need for numerous alchemical intermediate simulations, reducing per-ligand simulation cost by up to 26x.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces Direct Binding Free Energy (DBFE), a novel end-state ABFE method that requires only three simulations (receptor-only, ligand-only, and complex) without alchemical intermediates.
- Methodology Employs a combinatorial sampling strategy using KD-trees for fast steric clash detection, enabling efficient estimation of conformational entropy from precomputed simulations.
- Methodology Demonstrates a 26x reduction in per-ligand simulation cost compared to double decoupling methods in virtual screening contexts through amortization of receptor simulations.
主要结论
- DBFE achieved Pearson correlation r=0.58 on host-guest systems, outperforming OBC2 double decoupling (r=0.48) and demonstrating the importance of conformational entropy correction for these systems.
- On protein-ligand benchmarks, DBFE achieved r=0.65, slightly worse than OBC2 MM/GBSA (r=0.71), suggesting conformational entropy estimation introduces noise for complex protein systems.
- The performance gap between implicit solvent methods (DBFE/OBC2 DD r=0.65-0.73) and explicit solvent TIP3P DD (r=0.88) indicates that improving implicit solvent models would yield greater accuracy gains than improving free energy estimators.
摘要: Absolute Binding Free Energy (ABFE) methods are among the most accurate computational techniques for predicting protein-ligand binding affinities, but their utility is limited by the need for many simulations of alchemically modified intermediate states. We propose Direct Binding Free Energy (DBFE), an end-state ABFE method in implicit solvent that requires no alchemical intermediates. DBFE outperforms OBC2 double decoupling on a host-guest benchmark and performs comparably to OBC2 MM/GBSA on a protein-ligand benchmark. Since receptor and ligand simulations can be precomputed and amortized across compounds, DBFE requires only one complex simulation per ligand compared to the many lambda windows needed for double decoupling, making it a promising candidate for virtual screening workflows. We publicly release the code for this method at https://github.com/molecularmodelinglab/dbfe.