MAI-TargetFisher: A proteome-wide drug target prediction method synergetically enhanced by artificial intelligence and physical modeling

  • Shi Wei Li
  • , Peng Xuan Ren
  • , Lin Wang
  • , Qi Lei Han
  • , Feng Lei Li
  • , Hong Lin Li
  • , Fang Bai*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Computational target identification plays a pivotal role in the drug development process. With the significant advancements of deep learning methods for protein structure prediction, the structural coverage of human proteome has increased substantially. This progress inspired the development of the first genome-wide small molecule targets scanning method. Our method aims to localize drug targets and detect potential off-target effects early in the drug discovery process, thereby improving the success rate of drug development. We have constructed a high-quality database of protein structures with annotated potential binding sites, covering 82% of the protein-coding genome. On the basis of this database, to enhance our search capabilities, we have integrated computational techniques, including both artificial intelligence-based and biophysical model-based methods. This integration led to the development of a target identification method called Multi-Algorithm Integrated Target Fisher (MAI-TargetFisher). MAI-TargetFisher leverages the complementary strengths of various methods while minimizing their weaknesses, enabling precise database navigation to generate a reliably ranked set of candidate targets for an active query molecule. Importantly, our work is the first comprehensive scan of protein surfaces across the entire human genome, aimed at evaluating potential small molecule binding sites on each protein. Through a series of evaluations on benchmark and a target identification task, the results demonstrate the high hit rates and good reliability of our method under the validation of wet experiments. We have also made available a freely accessible web server at https://bailab.siais.shanghaitech.edu.cn/mai-targetfisher for non-commercial use.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere02057
Pages (from-to)1462-1475
Number of pages14
JournalActa Pharmacologica Sinica
Volume46
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2025

Keywords

  • binding site identification
  • deep-learning
  • ligand-based searching
  • reverse docking
  • target identification

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