BMAIJun 22, 2025

OmniESI: A unified framework for enzyme-substrate interaction prediction with progressive conditional deep learning

arXiv:2506.17963v13 citationsh-index: 7Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses enzyme-substrate interaction prediction for catalytic mechanism research and enzyme engineering, offering a unified approach with strong generalization, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing methods by adding conditional networks.

The paper tackled the problem of predicting enzyme-substrate interactions by introducing OmniESI, a two-stage progressive conditional deep learning framework that incorporates catalytic knowledge, resulting in superior performance across seven benchmarks with only a 0.16% parameter increase.

Understanding and modeling enzyme-substrate interactions is crucial for catalytic mechanism research, enzyme engineering, and metabolic engineering. Although a large number of predictive methods have emerged, they do not incorporate prior knowledge of enzyme catalysis to rationally modulate general protein-molecule features that are misaligned with catalytic patterns. To address this issue, we introduce a two-stage progressive framework, OmniESI, for enzyme-substrate interaction prediction through conditional deep learning. By decomposing the modeling of enzyme-substrate interactions into a two-stage progressive process, OmniESI incorporates two conditional networks that respectively emphasize enzymatic reaction specificity and crucial catalysis-related interactions, facilitating a gradual feature modulation in the latent space from general protein-molecule domain to catalysis-aware domain. On top of this unified architecture, OmniESI can adapt to a variety of downstream tasks, including enzyme kinetic parameter prediction, enzyme-substrate pairing prediction, enzyme mutational effect prediction, and enzymatic active site annotation. Under the multi-perspective performance evaluation of in-distribution and out-of-distribution settings, OmniESI consistently delivered superior performance than state-of-the-art specialized methods across seven benchmarks. More importantly, the proposed conditional networks were shown to internalize the fundamental patterns of catalytic efficiency while significantly improving prediction performance, with only negligible parameter increases (0.16%), as demonstrated by ablation studies on key components. Overall, OmniESI represents a unified predictive approach for enzyme-substrate interactions, providing an effective tool for catalytic mechanism cracking and enzyme engineering with strong generalization and broad applicability.

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