Author:
Zhang Xuechun,Hu Xiaoxuan,Zhang Tongtong,Yang Ling,Liu Chunhong,Xu Ning,Wang Haoyi,Sun Wen
Abstract
AbstractProtein solubility plays a crucial role in various biotechnological, industrial and biomedical applications. With the reduction in sequencing and gene synthesis costs, the adoption of high-throughput experimental screening coupled with tailored bioinformatic prediction has witnessed a rapidly growing trend for the development of novel functional enzymes of interest (EOI). High protein solubility rates are essential in this process and accurate prediction of solubility is a challenging task. As deep learning technology continues to evolve, attention-based protein language models (PLMs) can extract intrinsic information from protein sequences to a greater extent. Leveraging these models along with the increasing availability of protein solubility data inferred from structural database like the Protein Data Bank (PDB), holds great potential to enhance the prediction of protein solubility. In this study, we curated an UpdatedEscherichia coli(E.coli) protein Solubility DataSet (UESolDS) and employed a combination of multiple PLMs and classification layers to predict protein solubility. The resulting best-performing model, named Protein Language Model-based protein Solubility prediction model (PLM_Sol), demonstrated significant improvements over previous reported models, achieving a notable 5.7% increase in accuracy, 9% increase in F1_score, and 10.4% increase in MCC score on the independent test set. Moreover, additional evaluation utilizing our in-house synthesized protein resource as test data, encompassing diverse types of enzymes, also showcased the superior performance of PLM_Sol. Overall, PLM_Sol exhibited consistent and promising performance across both independent test set and experimental set, thereby making it well-suited for facilitating large-scale EOI studies. PLM_Sol is available as a standalone program and as an easy-to-use model athttps://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.10675340.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory