Although the therapeutic efficacy and commercial success of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are tremendous, the design and discovery of new candidates remain a time and cost-intensive endeavor. In this regard, progress in the generation of data describing antigen binding and developability, computational methodology, and artificial intelligence may pave the way for a new era of in silico on-demand immunotherapeutics design and discovery. Here, we argue that the main necessary machine learning (ML) components for an in silico mAb sequence generator are: understanding of the rules of mAb-antigen binding, capacity to modularly combine mAb design parameters, and algorithms for unconstrained parameter-driven in silico mAb sequence synthesis. We review the current progress toward the realization of these necessary components and discuss the challenges that must be overcome to allow the on-demand ML-based discovery and design of fit-for-purpose mAb therapeutic candidates.
Machine learning (ML) is a key technology to enable accurate prediction of antibody-antigen binding, a prerequisite for in silico vaccine and antibody design. Two orthogonal problems hinder the current application of ML to antibody-specificity prediction and the benchmarking thereof: (i) The lack of a unified formalized mapping of immunological antibody specificity prediction problems into ML notation and (ii) the unavailability of large-scale training datasets. Here, we developed the Absolut! software suite that allows the parameter-based unconstrained generation of synthetic lattice-based 3D-antibody-antigen binding structures with ground-truth access to conformational paratope, epitope, and affinity. We show that Absolut!-generated datasets recapitulate critical biological sequence and structural features that render antibody-antigen binding prediction challenging. To demonstrate the immediate, high-throughput, and large-scale applicability of Absolut!, we have created an online database of 1 billion antibody-antigen structures, the extension of which is only constrained by moderate computational resources. We translated immunological antibody specificity prediction problems into ML tasks and used our database to investigate paratope-epitope binding prediction accuracy as a function of structural information encoding, dataset size, and ML method, which is unfeasible with existing experimental data. Furthermore, we found that in silico investigated conditions, predicted to increase antibody specificity prediction accuracy, align with and extend conclusions drawn from experimental antibody-antigen structural data. In summary, the Absolut! framework enables the development and benchmarking of ML strategies for biotherapeutics discovery and design.
Generative machine learning (ML) has been postulated to become a major driver in the computational design of antigen-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAb). However, efforts to confirm this hypothesis have been hindered by the infeasibility of testing arbitrarily large numbers of antibody sequences for their most critical design parameters: paratope, epitope, affinity, and developability. To address this challenge, we leveraged a lattice-based antibody-antigen binding simulation framework, which incorporates a wide range of physiological antibody-binding parameters. The simulation framework enables the computation of synthetic antibody-antigen 3D-structures, and it functions as an oracle for unrestricted prospective evaluation and benchmarking of antibody design parameters of ML-generated antibody sequences. We found that a deep generative model, trained exclusively on antibody sequence (one dimensional: 1D) data can be used to design conformational (three dimensional: 3D) epitope-specific antibodies, matching, or exceeding the training dataset in affinity and developability parameter value variety. Furthermore, we established a lower threshold of sequence diversity necessary for high-accuracy generative antibody ML and demonstrated that this lower threshold also holds on experimental real-world data. Finally, we show that transfer learning enables the generation of high-affinity antibody sequences from low-N training data. Our work establishes a priori feasibility and the theoretical foundation of high-throughput ML-based mAb design.
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