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Biotech AI Science

And the Biggest Scientific Breakthrough of 2021 Is... (science.org) 29

Slashdot reader sciencehabit quotes Science magazine: In his 1972 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, American biochemist Christian Anfinsen laid out a vision: One day it would be possible, he said, to predict the 3D structure of any protein merely from its sequence of amino acid building blocks. With hundreds of thousands of proteins in the human body alone, such an advance would have vast applications, offering insights into basic biology and revealing promising new drug targets. Now, after nearly 50 years, researchers have shown that artificial intelligence (AI)-driven software can churn out accurate protein structures by the thousands—an advance that realizes Anfinsen's dream and is Science's 2021 Breakthrough of the Year.

Protein structures could once be determined only through painstaking lab analyses. But they can now be calculated, quickly, for tens of thousands of proteins, and for complexes of interacting proteins. "This is a sea change for structural biology," says Gaetano Montelione, a structural biologist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. David Baker, a University of Washington, Seattle, computational biochemist who led one of the prediction projects, adds that with the bounty of readily available structures, "All areas of computational and molecular biology will be transformed."

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And the Biggest Scientific Breakthrough of 2021 Is...

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  • I think what was being proposed was a theoretical solution to the problem. Given some sequence of amino acids, can we theoretically calculate the fold. Someone more apt in bioinformatics can likely China in on if this is even believed to be possible.

    Having an AI churn this out is little different than Fold-it with the latter likely being more inexpensive in the sense people use their own cycles. more so, I would like to see a comparison of human solutions with algorithmic help compared to pure AI and I susp

    • Chime in... not China... shit

    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
      From what I read about this invention, they have a good record of finding the actual 3D structure of most proteins where this structure is already known, but it's difficult to predict whether the training data is so representative of all the proteins with unknown 3D structure that we can expect equally good results on most of those, too. But time will tell...
    • by Anonymous Coward

      In the real world, the answer is "no". The difficulty is left-handed versus right-handed structures, and evolved reinforcement of them. A purely numerical or theoretical analysis cannot show which historical option was selected and is reinforced, not necessarily preferred, by evolutionary development.

      Also, frankly, a lot of genetic analysis has been flat-out wrong. I got a good look at human genome work as it was originially developed, and a lot of it was so very bad that the sequences being generated for a

  • Prions and PrP-like proteins (alpha synucleoid inclusions) are fucking terrifying. Please make them go away.

    • They're also really durable. It can take 900 degrees, Fahrenheit, for *hours*, to be sure of denaturing such simple proteins.

      • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday December 19, 2021 @01:32PM (#62097365)

        They're also really durable. It can take 900 degrees, Fahrenheit, for *hours*, to be sure of denaturing such simple proteins.

        Your numbers [memphis.edu] may be off by a bit. And a bit more [scientificamerican.com] about why prions are such pains in the ass to get rid of.

        And for those who might be curious, this is what your brain looks like [imgur.com] once prions get involved.

        • I was looking at https://dwr.virginia.gov/wildl... [virginia.gov], which cited "900 degrees Fahrenheit for several hours", which was the first Google hit and a state agency. I can quite easily believe that different organizations publish different standards. 900 degrees Fahrenheit is more the "incineration" treatment, rather than trying to keep expensive surgical instruments intact for safe reuse.

          • Today all we can do is add a spike protein to a bat virus, toss in a Furin cleavage site and hope for the best.

            But tomorrow we will be able to design the next virus from scratch. Just to see what happens, pure research. Oh what fun.

            I do not think that there is any organic molecule that can survive 900F, most plastics melt long before that. Let alone a complex protein.

            • You should look up vids of Britain responding to BSE. It is straight out of a horror movie, with the flame throwers, open pits burning the carcasses... digging out the contaminated soil.

              In my evil scientist mode, I could picture prions as a biological agent, plunging the world into madness.

              The effects would be straight out of HP Lovecraft, with a nuking of the planet to hopefully stop the spread.

              Prions are no joke.

        • And for those who might be curious, this is what your brain looks like once prions get involved.

          Next time you're having trouble sleeping, this will really cement your insomnia.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          It's a different prion disease from CJD. Turns out there's more than one!

  • I am a proud contributor to folding at home and rosetta at home. Via my computer. I see David Baker from R@H mentioned. Glad to have been of help. :)

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday December 19, 2021 @02:23PM (#62097509)

    That stupid-ass science.org site REFUSES to function AT ALL without cookies enabled. Fuck 'em and their bullshit tracking.

  • Judging by the rapidity of their adoption.

Ocean: A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man -- who has no gills. -- Ambrose Bierce

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