Abstract
Antibodies play a crucial role in disease treatment, leveraging their ability to selectively interact with the specific antigen. However, screening antibody gene sequences for target antigens via biological experiments is extremely time-consuming and labor-intensive. Several computational methods have been developed to predict antibody-antigen interaction while suffering from the lack of characterizing the underlying structure of the antibody. Beneficial from the recent breakthroughs in deep learning for antibody structure prediction, we propose a novel neural network architecture to predict antibody-antigen interaction. We first introduce AbAgIPA: an antibody structure prediction network to obtain the antibody backbone structure, where the structural features of antibodies and antigens are encoded into representation vectors according to the amino acid physicochemical features and Invariant Point Attention (IPA) computation methods. Finally, the antibody-antigen interaction is predicted by global max pooling, feature concatenation, and a fully connected layer. We evaluated our method on antigen diversity and antigen-specific antibody-antigen interaction datasets. Additionally, our model exhibits a commendable level of interpretability, essential for understanding underlying interaction mechanisms. Quantitative experimental results demonstrate that the new neural network architecture significantly outperforms the best sequence-based methods as well as the methods based on residue contact maps and graph convolution networks (GCNs). The source code is freely available on GitHub at https://github.com/gmthu66/AbAgIPA .
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