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GlycoNMR: Dataset and benchmarks for NMR chemical shift prediction of carbohydrates with graph neural networks (2311.17134v2)

Published 28 Nov 2023 in cs.LG and q-bio.QM

Abstract: Molecular representation learning (MRL) is a powerful tool for bridging the gap between machine learning and chemical sciences, as it converts molecules into numerical representations while preserving their chemical features. These encoded representations serve as a foundation for various downstream biochemical studies, including property prediction and drug design. MRL has had great success with proteins and general biomolecule datasets. Yet, in the growing sub-field of glycoscience (the study of carbohydrates, where longer carbohydrates are also called glycans), MRL methods have been barely explored. This under-exploration can be primarily attributed to the limited availability of comprehensive and well-curated carbohydrate-specific datasets and a lack of Machine learning (ML) pipelines specifically tailored to meet the unique problems presented by carbohydrate data. Since interpreting and annotating carbohydrate-specific data is generally more complicated than protein data, domain experts are usually required to get involved. The existing MRL methods, predominately optimized for proteins and small biomolecules, also cannot be directly used in carbohydrate applications without special modifications. To address this challenge, accelerate progress in glycoscience, and enrich the data resources of the MRL community, we introduce GlycoNMR. GlycoNMR contains two laboriously curated datasets with 2,609 carbohydrate structures and 211,543 annotated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical shifts for precise atomic-level prediction. We tailored carbohydrate-specific features and adapted existing MRL models to tackle this problem effectively. For illustration, we benchmark four modified MRL models on our new datasets.

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Authors (5)
  1. Zizhang Chen (5 papers)
  2. Ryan Paul Badman (1 paper)
  3. Lachele Foley (1 paper)
  4. Robert Woods (1 paper)
  5. Pengyu Hong (26 papers)

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