LGAIJun 1, 2025

Manipulating 3D Molecules in a Fixed-Dimensional E(3)-Equivariant Latent Space

arXiv:2506.00771v22 citationsh-index: 12
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for flexible molecule editing in medicinal chemistry, offering a novel approach but with incremental improvements over existing deep learning methods.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing 3D molecular structures for drug design by proposing MolFLAE, a method that learns a fixed-dimensional, E(3)-equivariant latent space for zero-shot manipulation, achieving competitive performance on generation benchmarks and demonstrating improved hydrophilicity in a drug optimization task.

Medicinal chemists often optimize drugs considering their 3D structures and designing structurally distinct molecules that retain key features, such as shapes, pharmacophores, or chemical properties. Previous deep learning approaches address this through supervised tasks like molecule inpainting or property-guided optimization. In this work, we propose a flexible zero-shot molecule manipulation method by navigating in a shared latent space of 3D molecules. We introduce a Variational AutoEncoder (VAE) for 3D molecules, named MolFLAE, which learns a fixed-dimensional, E(3)-equivariant latent space independent of atom counts. MolFLAE encodes 3D molecules using an E(3)-equivariant neural network into fixed number of latent nodes, distinguished by learned embeddings. The latent space is regularized, and molecular structures are reconstructed via a Bayesian Flow Network (BFN) conditioned on the encoder's latent output. MolFLAE achieves competitive performance on standard unconditional 3D molecule generation benchmarks. Moreover, the latent space of MolFLAE enables zero-shot molecule manipulation, including atom number editing, structure reconstruction, and coordinated latent interpolation for both structure and properties. We further demonstrate our approach on a drug optimization task for the human glucocorticoid receptor, generating molecules with improved hydrophilicity while preserving key interactions, under computational evaluations. These results highlight the flexibility, robustness, and real-world utility of our method, opening new avenues for molecule editing and optimization.

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