LGBMJun 10, 2025

AlphaFold Database Debiasing for Robust Inverse Folding

arXiv:2506.08365v12 citationsh-index: 27
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a critical limitation for researchers using predicted protein structures in data-driven protein design, though it is incremental as it builds on existing debiasing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of systematic geometric bias in AlphaFold Database structures, which limits their use in inverse folding tasks, and introduces a Debiasing Structure AutoEncoder that improves inverse folding performance across multiple benchmarks.

The AlphaFold Protein Structure Database (AFDB) offers unparalleled structural coverage at near-experimental accuracy, positioning it as a valuable resource for data-driven protein design. However, its direct use in training deep models that are sensitive to fine-grained atomic geometry, such as inverse folding, exposes a critical limitation. Comparative analysis of structural feature distributions reveals that AFDB structures exhibit distinct statistical regularities, reflecting a systematic geometric bias that deviates from the conformational diversity found in experimentally determined structures from the Protein Data Bank (PDB). While AFDB structures are cleaner and more idealized, PDB structures capture the intrinsic variability and physical realism essential for generalization in downstream tasks. To address this discrepancy, we introduce a Debiasing Structure AutoEncoder (DeSAE) that learns to reconstruct native-like conformations from intentionally corrupted backbone geometries. By training the model to recover plausible structural states, DeSAE implicitly captures a more robust and natural structural manifold. At inference, applying DeSAE to AFDB structures produces debiased structures that significantly improve inverse folding performance across multiple benchmarks. This work highlights the critical impact of subtle systematic biases in predicted structures and presents a principled framework for debiasing, significantly boosting the performance of structure-based learning tasks like inverse folding.

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