Rigidity-Aware Geometric Pretraining for Protein Design and Conformational Ensembles
This work addresses key bottlenecks in protein design for computational biology by enabling better joint learning of geometry and design tasks.
The paper tackles the limitations of current generative models for protein design by introducing RigidSSL, a geometric pretraining framework that learns protein geometry through rigidity-aware self-supervised learning. The method improves designability by up to 43%, enhances novelty and diversity in generation, and achieves a 5.8% higher success rate in zero-shot motif scaffolding.
Generative models have recently advanced $\textit{de novo}$ protein design by learning the statistical regularities of natural structures. However, current approaches face three key limitations: (1) Existing methods cannot jointly learn protein geometry and design tasks, where pretraining can be a solution; (2) Current pretraining methods mostly rely on local, non-rigid atomic representations for property prediction downstream tasks, limiting global geometric understanding for protein generation tasks; and (3) Existing approaches have yet to effectively model the rich dynamic and conformational information of protein structures. To overcome these issues, we introduce $\textbf{RigidSSL}$ ($\textit{Rigidity-Aware Self-Supervised Learning}$), a geometric pretraining framework that front-loads geometry learning prior to generative finetuning. Phase I (RigidSSL-Perturb) learns geometric priors from 432K structures from the AlphaFold Protein Structure Database with simulated perturbations. Phase II (RigidSSL-MD) refines these representations on 1.3K molecular dynamics trajectories to capture physically realistic transitions. Underpinning both phases is a bi-directional, rigidity-aware flow matching objective that jointly optimizes translational and rotational dynamics to maximize mutual information between conformations. Empirically, RigidSSL variants improve designability by up to 43\% while enhancing novelty and diversity in unconditional generation. Furthermore, RigidSSL-Perturb improves the success rate by 5.8\% in zero-shot motif scaffolding and RigidSSL-MD captures more biophysically realistic conformational ensembles in G protein-coupled receptor modeling. The code is available at: https://github.com/ZhanghanNi/RigidSSL.git.