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1.
Mol Inform ; 42(12): e202300113, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37710142

ABSTRACT

Nowadays there are numerous discovered natural RNA variations participating in different cellular processes and artificial RNA, e. g., aptamers, riboswitches. One of the required tasks in the investigation of their functions and mechanism of influence on cells and interaction with targets is the prediction of RNA secondary structures. The classic thermodynamic-based prediction algorithms do not consider the specificity of biological folding and deep learning methods that were designed to resolve this issue suffer from homology-based methods problems. Herein, we present a method for RNA secondary structure prediction based on deep learning - AliNA (ALIgned Nucleic Acids). Our method successfully predicts secondary structures for non-homologous to train-data RNA families thanks to usage of the data augmentation techniques. Augmentation extends existing datasets with easily-accessible simulated data. The proposed method shows a high quality of prediction across different benchmarks including pseudoknots. The method is available on GitHub for free (https://github.com/Arty40m/AliNA).


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , RNA , Humans , RNA/chemistry , RNA/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Algorithms
2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 3178, 2021 02 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33542271

ABSTRACT

The "creativity" of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in terms of generating de novo molecular structures opened a novel paradigm in compound design, weaknesses (stability & feasibility issues of such structures) notwithstanding. Here we show that "creative" AI may be as successfully taught to enumerate novel chemical reactions that are stoichiometrically coherent. Furthermore, when coupled to reaction space cartography, de novo reaction design may be focused on the desired reaction class. A sequence-to-sequence autoencoder with bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory layers was trained on on-purpose developed "SMILES/CGR" strings, encoding reactions of the USPTO database. The autoencoder latent space was visualized on a generative topographic map. Novel latent space points were sampled around a map area populated by Suzuki reactions and decoded to corresponding reactions. These can be critically analyzed by the expert, cleaned of irrelevant functional groups and eventually experimentally attempted, herewith enlarging the synthetic purpose of popular synthetic pathways.

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