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Seeing double: Collaborators ‘hallucinate’ new proteins

This article featured in Illuminate Newsletter Winter ‘23
Key Researchers
Black and white photo of Richard Birkinshaw
Dr Richard Birkinshaw
Senior Research Officer
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Introduction

Postdoctoral researchers Dr Marjan Hadian-Jazi and Dr Richard Birkinshaw are using artificial intelligence to “hallucinate” the structures of non-existent proteins, after winning a WEHI Eve Mahlab Award for Blue Sky Research.

Marjan Hadian-Jazi and Richard Birkinshaw
Marjan Hadian-Jazi and Richard Birkinshaw

Marjan:

My PhD is in computer science, but as a postdoctoral fellow I had the opportunity to work at a research institute in Germany analysing X-ray crystallography data.

It was a highly multi-disciplinary place and I got to know a little about the potential application of artificial intelligence (AI) in structural biology; that got me interested in designing novel proteins using AI-based methods.

The idea is that if we can create particular proteins, we can tackle medical challenges that are currently impossible, so it widens the horizon for developing treatments for disease.

I heard about the Eve Mahlab awards not long after I joined the imaging lab at WEHI in 2022. These awards fund the most exciting and promising blue sky ideas from WEHI postdoctoral researchers and they’re a fantastic opportunity for us to really dream big.

I asked Kelly Rogers, head of the Centre for Dynamic Imaging, if she knew a structural biologist who might be interested in collaborating and applying for the award, and she suggested Richard.

As it turned out, although we have very different backgrounds, Richard and I share a passion for applying deep learning and AI to structural biology and protein design. I think our different experiences and perspectives are among the things that make this project so interesting and rewarding.

Proteins have a wide range of essential functions in cells and biological systems – they’re involved in everything from cell architecture and movement to signalling and catalysing vital biochemical reactions.

In the structural biology context, “hallucinating” means using AI to imagine proteins that don’t actually exist in nature but could meet specific biological functions if they did.

Designing non-existent proteins is a very complex task and my role is to use state-of-the-art AI and machine learning methods to handle that complexity.

I’m hoping that one outcome of this project will be new AI methods for protein design that will allow us to input multiple parameters, something that’s currently not possible.

We’re also hoping to produce simplified tools for protein design that can be modified and tailored to suit the needs of different biological research projects.

It would be wonderful if our work could help make these simpler approaches more accessible to other researchers, not only at WEHI but in the wider scientific community.

We’re both very grateful to Eve Mahlab and the Mahlab Family for funding our “blue sky” project and to Associate Professors Kelly Rogers, Matt Call and Peter Czabotar for their support.

Richard:

It’s a really exciting time to be a structural biologist: AI is revolutionising the discipline and that has inspired a new direction in my research and a desire to use these methods at WEHI.

AI paves the way for designing new proteins that don’t currently exist in nature to provide new functionalities for influencing biological systems, and I’m particularly excited by that.

Our division co-head Matt Call informed me of an opportunity to pair with a postdoctoral researcher in Kelly Rogers’ team – Marjan – who was interested in applying AI to structural biology.

We didn’t know each other so we organised a meeting in the WEHI tearoom, which turned into a very stimulating discussion. It was immediately clear that Marjan and I had complementary skills and perspectives that would allow us to achieve goals that weren’t feasible individually.

Marjan brings her expertise in machine learning to the table and I have my background in structural biology.

I look at a biological function and ask: “How can we do this with AI?” In contrast, Marjan looks at an AI method and asks: “How we can apply this to a biological problem?” Then we look at the areas of synergy, prioritise and end up with new projects!

The function of a protein is largely determined by its 3D shape. In traditional structural biology we start with an amino acid sequence obtained or modified from a biological system and try to determine what shape it takes.

AI-based “hallucination” and “in-painting” reverses this process: you tell the AI what 3D shape you need to achieve a certain biological effect, and the algorithms then determine the amino acid sequences that will best fold into that shape.

As the name implies, my role as a structural biologist is to advise on protein 3D structure and how best to test the biology.

In the short term, we hope to generate designs for new proteins that can influence biological systems in new ways and uncover new biology; in the long term I’m hoping we can adapt these processes to develop new disease therapies.

Having diverse but complementary backgrounds and perspectives allows us to be more creative when we brainstorm new ideas for our research, which I find very exciting!

And I’m looking forward to many more stimulating discussions with Marjan about AI methods and applying them to other aspects of structural biology.

 

First published on 01 June 2023
This article featured in Illuminate Newsletter Winter ‘23
WEHI Authors
Black and white photo of Richard Birkinshaw
Dr Richard Birkinshaw
Senior Research Officer
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