Paper List
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Formation of Artificial Neural Assemblies by Biologically Plausible Inhibition Mechanisms
This work addresses the core limitation of the Assembly Calculus model—its fixed-size, biologically implausible k-WTA selection process—by introducing...
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How to make the most of your masked language model for protein engineering
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of efficiently sampling high-quality, diverse protein sequences from Masked Language Models (MLMs) for pr...
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Module control in youth symptom networks across COVID-19
This paper addresses the core challenge of distinguishing whether a prolonged societal stressor (COVID-19) fundamentally reorganizes the architecture ...
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JEDI: Jointly Embedded Inference of Neural Dynamics
This paper addresses the core challenge of inferring context-dependent neural dynamics from noisy, high-dimensional recordings using a single unified ...
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ATP Level and Phosphorylation Free Energy Regulate Trigger-Wave Speed and Critical Nucleus Size in Cellular Biochemical Systems
This work addresses the core challenge of quantitatively predicting how the cellular energy state (ATP level and phosphorylation free energy) governs ...
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Packaging Jupyter notebooks as installable desktop apps using LabConstrictor
This paper addresses the core pain point of ensuring Jupyter notebook reproducibility and accessibility across different computing environments, parti...
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SNPgen: Phenotype-Supervised Genotype Representation and Synthetic Data Generation via Latent Diffusion
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating privacy-preserving synthetic genotype data that maintains both statistical fidelity and downstre...
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Continuous Diffusion Transformers for Designing Synthetic Regulatory Elements
This paper addresses the challenge of efficiently generating novel, cell-type-specific regulatory DNA sequences with high predicted activity while min...
Empowering Chemical Structures with Biological Insights for Scalable Phenotypic Virtual Screening
Hunan University | Jiangnan University | University of Tsukuba | Hong Kong Baptist University | Xiamen University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of bridging the gap between scalable chemical structure screening and biologically informative but resource-intensive phenotypic profiling in drug discovery.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces DECODE framework that uses geometric disentanglement to separate measurement-invariant biological signals from modality-specific experimental noise
- Methodology Implements contrastive learning with orthogonal constraints to align heterogeneous biological modalities into a unified biological consensus space
- Methodology Develops three adaptive inference protocols including zero-shot retrieval, dynamic adaptation, and generative integration for virtual screening
主要结论
- DECODE achieves over 20% relative improvement in zero-shot MOA prediction compared to chemical baselines, demonstrating effective biological signal extraction from structures alone
- The framework yields a 6-fold increase in hit rates for novel anti-cancer agents during external validation (AUC: 0.737 vs 0.694 for chemical baseline)
- DECODE's disentanglement mechanism improves F1-score by 15.8% over expert MLP baselines on sparsely labeled CDRP dataset, showing robustness against experimental noise
摘要: Motivation: The scalable identification of bioactive compounds is essential for contemporary drug discovery. This process faces a key trade-off: structural screening offers scalability but lacks biological context, whereas high-content phenotypic profiling provides deep biological insights but is resource-intensive. The primary challenge is to extract robust biological signals from noisy data and encode them into representations that do not require biological data at inference. Results: This study presents DECODE (DEcomposing Cellular Observations of Drug Effects), a framework that bridges this gap by empowering chemical representations with intrinsic biological semantics to enable structure-based in silico biological profiling. DECODE leverages limited paired transcriptomic and morphological data as supervisory signals during training, enabling the extraction of a measurement-invariant biological fingerprint from chemical structures and explicit filtering of experimental noise. Our evaluations demonstrate that DECODE retrieves functionally similar drugs in zero-shot settings with over 20% relative improvement over chemical baselines in mechanism-of-action (MOA) prediction. Furthermore, the framework achieves a 6-fold increase in hit rates for novel anti-cancer agents during external validation. Availability and implementation: The codes and datasets of DECODE are available at https://github.com/lian-xiao/DECODE.