Abstract

Engineering proteins to have desired properties by mutating amino acids at specific sites is commonplace. Such engineered proteins must be stable to function. Experimental methods used to determine stability at throughputs required to scan the protein sequence space thoroughly are laborious. To this end, many machine learning based methods have been developed to predict thermodynamic stability changes upon mutation. These methods have been evaluated for symmetric consistency by testing with hypothetical reverse mutations. In this work, we propose transitive data augmentation, evaluating transitive consistency with our new Stransitive data set, and a new machine learning based method, the first of its kind, that incorporates both symmetric and transitive properties into the architecture. Our method, called SCONES, is an interpretable neural network that predicts small relative protein stability changes for missense mutations that do not significantly alter the structure. It estimates a residue's contributions toward protein stability (ΔG) in its local structural environment, and the difference between independently predicted contributions of the reference and mutant residues is reported as ΔΔG. We show that this self-consistent machine learning architecture is immune to many common biases in data sets, relies less on data than existing methods, is robust to overfitting, and can explain a substantial portion of the variance in experimental data.

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