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Designing new peptide and protein therapeutics using adiabatic quantum annealers

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to design new peptide and protein sequences that can adopt folds not found in nature permits new functions to be engineered.  Of particular interest is the rational design of peptide and protein therapeutics that are able to bind specifically to, and alter the function of, target biomolecules implicated in human disease.  Over the last 20 years, major advancements have been made in classical computing approaches for peptide and protein design.  Nevertheless, the design problem is NP-complete: no known classical algorithm scales well as either the number of amino acids in the polypeptide chain grows large (as in the case of large proteins) or the number of building-blocks from which one may choose grows large (as in the case of synthetic peptides that can be built from hundreds of artificial amino acid types).  This limits the complexity of the design problems that can currently be solved classically.  Here, we introduce approaches for designing peptides and proteins using adiabatic quantum annealers to solve the hard combinatorial problem of design, without simplification or reduction to a toy problem.  Using the D-Wave Advantage system, we demonstrate application of our methods to nontrivial peptide design problems.

Publication: Mulligan VK, Merritt, HI, Slocum S, Weitzner BD, Wakins AM, Renfrew PD, Pelissier C, Arora PS, and Bonneau R. 2019. Designing Peptides on a Quantum Computer. bioRxiv preprint. doi: 10.1101/752485.

Presenters

  • Vikram K Mulligan

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Flatiron Institute

Authors

  • Vikram K Mulligan

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Flatiron Institute

  • Hans Melo

    Menten AI

  • Haley I Merritt

    Dept. of Chemistry, New York University

  • Michael Sawaya

    UCLA-DOE Molecular Biology Institute

  • Stewart Slocum

    Department of Computer Science, Johns Hopkins University

  • Brian Weitzner

    Outpace Bio

  • Andrew Watkins

    Prescient Design

  • P. Douglas Renfrew

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute

  • Craig Pelissier

    Goddard Space Flight Center, National Aeronautics and Space Administration

  • Todd Yeates

    Dept. of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of California Los Angeles

  • Paramjit Arora

    Dept. of Chemistry, New York University

  • Richard Bonneau

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute; Prescient Design

  • Mohit Pandey

    Menten AI

  • Alexey Galda

    Menten AI, University of Chicago, Menten AI, Inc.