Issue 25, 2021

Predicting enzymatic reactions with a molecular transformer

Abstract

The use of enzymes for organic synthesis allows for simplified, more economical and selective synthetic routes not accessible to conventional reagents. However, predicting whether a particular molecule might undergo a specific enzyme transformation is very difficult. Here we used multi-task transfer learning to train the molecular transformer, a sequence-to-sequence machine learning model, with one million reactions from the US Patent Office (USPTO) database combined with 32 181 enzymatic transformations annotated with a text description of the enzyme. The resulting enzymatic transformer model predicts the structure and stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reaction products with remarkable accuracy. One of the key novelties is that we combined the reaction SMILES language of only 405 atomic tokens with thousands of human language tokens describing the enzymes, such that our enzymatic transformer not only learned to interpret SMILES, but also the natural language as used by human experts to describe enzymes and their mutations.

Graphical abstract: Predicting enzymatic reactions with a molecular transformer

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
28 Apr 2021
Accepted
24 May 2021
First published
25 May 2021
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY license

Chem. Sci., 2021,12, 8648-8659

Predicting enzymatic reactions with a molecular transformer

D. Kreutter, P. Schwaller and J. Reymond, Chem. Sci., 2021, 12, 8648 DOI: 10.1039/D1SC02362D

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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