AICEDec 10, 2025

DynaMate: An Autonomous Agent for Protein-Ligand Molecular Dynamics Simulations

arXiv:2512.10034v1h-index: 8
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a bottleneck in drug discovery and protein engineering by automating molecular dynamics workflows, though it is incremental as it applies existing agentic LLM methods to a new domain.

The authors tackled the technical complexity of setting up molecular dynamics simulations for protein-ligand systems by developing DynaMate, an autonomous agent framework that successfully performed full simulations across twelve benchmark systems with reliable error correction and analysis.

Force field-based molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are indispensable for probing the structure, dynamics, and functions of biomolecular systems, including proteins and protein-ligand complexes. Despite their broad utility in drug discovery and protein engineering, the technical complexity of MD setup, encompassing parameterization, input preparation, and software configuration, remains a major barrier for widespread and efficient usage. Agentic LLMs have demonstrated their capacity to autonomously execute multi-step scientific processes, and to date, they have not successfully been used to automate protein-ligand MD workflows. Here, we present DynaMate, a modular multi-agent framework that autonomously designs and executes complete MD workflows for both protein and protein-ligand systems, and offers free energy binding affinity calculations with the MM/PB(GB)SA method. The framework integrates dynamic tool use, web search, PaperQA, and a self-correcting behavior. DynaMate comprises three specialized modules, interacting to plan the experiment, perform the simulation, and analyze the results. We evaluated its performance across twelve benchmark systems of varying complexity, assessing success rate, efficiency, and adaptability. DynaMate reliably performed full MD simulations, corrected runtime errors through iterative reasoning, and produced meaningful analyses of protein-ligand interactions. This automated framework paves the way toward standardized, scalable, and time-efficient molecular modeling pipelines for future biomolecular and drug design applications.

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