Ahmet Sarıgün

2papers

2 Papers

LGFeb 15, 2023
Target Specific De Novo Design of Drug Candidate Molecules with Graph Transformer-based Generative Adversarial Networks

Atabey Ünlü, Elif Çevrim, Melih Gökay Yiğit et al.

Discovering novel drug candidate molecules is one of the most fundamental and critical steps in drug development. Generative deep learning models, which create synthetic data given a probability distribution, offer a high potential for designing de novo molecules. However, to be utilisable in real life drug development pipelines, these models should be able to design drug like and target centric molecules. In this study, we propose an end to end generative system, DrugGEN, for the de novo design of drug candidate molecules that interact with intended target proteins. The proposed method represents molecules as graphs and processes them via a generative adversarial network comprising graph transformer layers. The system is trained using a large dataset of drug like compounds and target specific bioactive molecules to design effective inhibitory molecules against the AKT1 protein, which is critically important in developing treatments for various types of cancer. We conducted molecular docking and dynamics to assess the target centric generation performance of the model, as well as attention score visualisation to examine model interpretability. In parallel, selected compounds were chemically synthesised and evaluated in the context of in vitro enzymatic assays, which identified two bioactive molecules that inhibited AKT1 at low micromolar concentrations. These results indicate that DrugGEN's de novo molecules have a high potential for interacting with the AKT1 protein at the level of its native ligands. Using the open access DrugGEN codebase, it is possible to easily train models for other druggable proteins, given a dataset of experimentally known bioactive molecules.

LGJan 29, 2023Code
Graph Mixer Networks

Ahmet Sarıgün

In recent years, the attention mechanism has demonstrated superior performance in various tasks, leading to the emergence of GAT and Graph Transformer models that utilize this mechanism to extract relational information from graph-structured data. However, the high computational cost associated with the Transformer block, as seen in Vision Transformers, has motivated the development of alternative architectures such as MLP-Mixers, which have been shown to improve performance in image tasks while reducing the computational cost. Despite the effectiveness of Transformers in graph-based tasks, their computational efficiency remains a concern. The logic behind MLP-Mixers, which addresses this issue in image tasks, has the potential to be applied to graph-structured data as well. In this paper, we propose the Graph Mixer Network (GMN), also referred to as Graph Nasreddin Nets (GNasNets), a framework that incorporates the principles of MLP-Mixers for graph-structured data. Using a PNA model with multiple aggregators as the foundation, our proposed GMN has demonstrated improved performance compared to Graph Transformers. The source code is available publicly at https://github.com/asarigun/GraphMixerNetworks.