Ekaterina V. Skorb

h-index40
2papers

2 Papers

AINov 11, 2025
MADD: Multi-Agent Drug Discovery Orchestra

Gleb V. Solovev, Alina B. Zhidkovskaya, Anastasia Orlova et al.

Hit identification is a central challenge in early drug discovery, traditionally requiring substantial experimental resources. Recent advances in artificial intelligence, particularly large language models (LLMs), have enabled virtual screening methods that reduce costs and improve efficiency. However, the growing complexity of these tools has limited their accessibility to wet-lab researchers. Multi-agent systems offer a promising solution by combining the interpretability of LLMs with the precision of specialized models and tools. In this work, we present MADD, a multi-agent system that builds and executes customized hit identification pipelines from natural language queries. MADD employs four coordinated agents to handle key subtasks in de novo compound generation and screening. We evaluate MADD across seven drug discovery cases and demonstrate its superior performance compared to existing LLM-based solutions. Using MADD, we pioneer the application of AI-first drug design to five biological targets and release the identified hit molecules. Finally, we introduce a new benchmark of query-molecule pairs and docking scores for over three million compounds to contribute to the agentic future of drug design.

CVOct 24, 2024Code
Cellpose+, a morphological analysis tool for feature extraction of stained cell images

Israel A. Huaman, Fares D. E. Ghorabe, Sofya S. Chumakova et al.

Advanced image segmentation and processing tools present an opportunity to study cell processes and their dynamics. However, image analysis is often routine and time-consuming. Nowadays, alternative data-driven approaches using deep learning are potentially offering automatized, accurate, and fast image analysis. In this paper, we extend the applications of Cellpose, a state-of-the-art cell segmentation framework, with feature extraction capabilities to assess morphological characteristics. We also introduce a dataset of DAPI and FITC stained cells to which our new method is applied.