Journal of chemical information and modeling | 2021

PyPEF - An Integrated Framework for Data-Driven Protein Engineering

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Data-driven strategies are gaining increased attention in protein engineering due to recent advances in access to large experimental databanks of proteins, next-generation sequencing (NGS), high-throughput screening (HTS) methods, and the development of artificial intelligence algorithms. However, the reliable prediction of beneficial amino acid substitutions, their combination, and the effect on functional properties remain the most significant challenges in protein engineering, which is applied to develop proteins and enzymes for biocatalysis, biomedicine, and life sciences. Here, we present a general-purpose framework (PyPEF: pythonic protein engineering framework) for performing data-driven protein engineering using machine learning methods combined with techniques from signal processing and statistical physics. PyPEF guides the identification and selection of beneficial proteins of a defined sequence space by systematically or randomly exploring the fitness of variants and by sampling random evolution pathways. The performance of PyPEF was evaluated concerning its predictive accuracy and throughput on four public protein and enzyme data sets using common regression models. It was proved that the program could efficiently predict the fitness of protein sequences for different target properties (predictive models with coefficient of determination values ranging from 0.58 to 0.92). By combining machine learning and protein evolution, PyPEF enabled the screening of proteins with various functions, reaching a screening capacity of more than 500,000 protein sequence variants in the timeframe of only a few minutes on a personal computer. PyPEF displayed significant accuracies on four public data sets (different proteins and properties) and underlined the potential of integrating data-driven technologies for covering different philosophies by either predicting the fitness of the variants to the highest accuracy accounting for epistatic effects or capturing the general trend of introduced mutations on the fitness in directed protein evolution campaigns. In essence, PyPEF can provide a powerful solution to current sequence exploration and combinatorial problems faced in protein engineering through exhaustive in silico screening of the sequence space.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00099
Language English
Journal Journal of chemical information and modeling

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