SaLT&PepPr is an interface-predicting language model for designing peptide-guided protein degraders

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Abstract

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are critical for biological processes and predicting the sites of these interactions is useful for both computational and experimental applications. We present a Structure-agnostic Language Transformer and Peptide Prioritization (SaLT&PepPr) pipeline to predict interaction interfaces from a protein sequence alone for the subsequent generation of peptidic binding motifs. Our model fine-tunes the ESM-2 protein language model (pLM) with a per-position prediction task to identify PPI sites using data from the PDB, and prioritizes motifs which are most likely to be involved within inter-chain binding. By only using amino acid sequence as input, our model is competitive with structural homology-based methods, but exhibits reduced performance compared with deep learning models that input both structural and sequence features. Inspired by our previous results using co-crystals to engineer target-binding “guide” peptides, we curate PPI databases to identify partners for subsequent peptide derivation. Fusing guide peptides to an E3 ubiquitin ligase domain, we demonstrate degradation of endogenous β-catenin, 4E-BP2, and TRIM8, and highlight the nanomolar binding affinity, low off-targeting propensity, and function-altering capability of our best-performing degraders in cancer cells. In total, our study suggests that prioritizing binders from natural interactions via pLMs can enable programmable protein targeting and modulation.

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Brixi, G., Ye, T., Hong, L., Wang, T., Monticello, C., Lopez-Barbosa, N., … Chatterjee, P. (2023). SaLT&PepPr is an interface-predicting language model for designing peptide-guided protein degraders. Communications Biology, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05464-z

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