Close Menu
    DevStackTipsDevStackTips
    • Home
    • News & Updates
      1. Tech & Work
      2. View All

      Top 15 Enterprise Use Cases That Justify Hiring Node.js Developers in 2025

      July 31, 2025

      The Core Model: Start FROM The Answer, Not WITH The Solution

      July 31, 2025

      AI-Generated Code Poses Major Security Risks in Nearly Half of All Development Tasks, Veracode Research Reveals   

      July 31, 2025

      Understanding the code modernization conundrum

      July 31, 2025

      Not just YouTube: Google is using AI to guess your age based on your activity – everywhere

      July 31, 2025

      Malicious extensions can use ChatGPT to steal your personal data – here’s how

      July 31, 2025

      What Zuckerberg’s ‘personal superintelligence’ sales pitch leaves out

      July 31, 2025

      This handy NordVPN tool flags scam calls on Android – even before you answer

      July 31, 2025
    • Development
      1. Algorithms & Data Structures
      2. Artificial Intelligence
      3. Back-End Development
      4. Databases
      5. Front-End Development
      6. Libraries & Frameworks
      7. Machine Learning
      8. Security
      9. Software Engineering
      10. Tools & IDEs
      11. Web Design
      12. Web Development
      13. Web Security
      14. Programming Languages
        • PHP
        • JavaScript
      Featured

      Route Optimization through Laravel’s Shallow Resource Architecture

      July 31, 2025
      Recent

      Route Optimization through Laravel’s Shallow Resource Architecture

      July 31, 2025

      This Week in Laravel: Laracon News, Free Laravel Idea, and Claude Code Course

      July 31, 2025

      Everything We Know About Pest 4

      July 31, 2025
    • Operating Systems
      1. Windows
      2. Linux
      3. macOS
      Featured

      FOSS Weekly #25.31: Kernel 6.16, OpenMandriva Review, Conky Customization, System Monitoring and More

      July 31, 2025
      Recent

      FOSS Weekly #25.31: Kernel 6.16, OpenMandriva Review, Conky Customization, System Monitoring and More

      July 31, 2025

      Windows 11’s MSN Widgets board now opens in default browser, such as Chrome (EU only)

      July 31, 2025

      Microsoft’s new “move to Windows 11” campaign implies buying OneDrive paid plan

      July 31, 2025
    • Learning Resources
      • Books
      • Cheatsheets
      • Tutorials & Guides
    Home»Development»Artificial Intelligence»Repurposing Protein Folding Models for Generation with Latent Diffusion

    Repurposing Protein Folding Models for Generation with Latent Diffusion

    July 31, 2025
    Repurposing Protein Folding Models for Generation with Latent Diffusion



    PLAID is a multimodal generative model that simultaneously generates protein 1D sequence and 3D structure, by learning the latent space of protein folding models.

    The awarding of the 2024 Nobel Prize to AlphaFold2 marks an important moment of recognition for the of AI role in biology. What comes next after protein folding?

    In PLAID, we develop a method that learns to sample from the latent space of protein folding models to generate new proteins. It can accept compositional function and organism prompts, and can be trained on sequence databases, which are 2-4 orders of magnitude larger than structure databases. Unlike many previous protein structure generative models, PLAID addresses the multimodal co-generation problem setting: simultaneously generating both discrete sequence and continuous all-atom structural coordinates.

    From structure prediction to real-world drug design

    Though recent works demonstrate promise for the ability of diffusion models to generate proteins, there still exist limitations of previous models that make them impractical for real-world applications, such as:

    • All-atom generation: Many existing generative models only produce the backbone atoms. To produce the all-atom structure and place the sidechain atoms, we need to know the sequence. This creates a multimodal generation problem that requires simultaneous generation of discrete and continuous modalities.
    • Organism specificity: Proteins biologics intended for human use need to be humanized, to avoid being destroyed by the human immune system.
    • Control specification: Drug discovery and putting it into the hands of patients is a complex process. How can we specify these complex constraints? For example, even after the biology is tackled, you might decide that tablets are easier to transport than vials, adding a new constraint on soluability.

    Generating “useful” proteins

    Simply generating proteins is not as useful as controlling the generation to get useful proteins. What might an interface for this look like?



    For inspiration, let’s consider how we’d control image generation via compositional textual prompts (example from Liu et al., 2022).

    In PLAID, we mirror this interface for control specification. The ultimate goal is to control generation entirely via a textual interface, but here we consider compositional constraints for two axes as a proof-of-concept: function and organism:



    Learning the function-structure-sequence connection. PLAID learns the tetrahedral cysteine-Fe2+/Fe3+ coordination pattern often found in metalloproteins, while maintaining high sequence-level diversity.

    Training using sequence-only training data

    Another important aspect of the PLAID model is that we only require sequences to train the generative model! Generative models learn the data distribution defined by its training data, and sequence databases are considerably larger than structural ones, since sequences are much cheaper to obtain than experimental structure.



    Learning from a larger and broader database. The cost of obtaining protein sequences is much lower than experimentally characterizing structure, and sequence databases are 2-4 orders of magnitude larger than structural ones.

    How does it work?

    The reason that we’re able to train the generative model to generate structure by only using sequence data is by learning a diffusion model over the latent space of a protein folding model. Then, during inference, after sampling from this latent space of valid proteins, we can take frozen weights from the protein folding model to decode structure. Here, we use ESMFold, a successor to the AlphaFold2 model which replaces a retrieval step with a protein language model.



    Our method. During training, only sequences are needed to obtain the embedding; during inference, we can decode sequence and structure from the sampled embedding. ❄️ denotes frozen weights.

    In this way, we can use structural understanding information in the weights of pretrained protein folding models for the protein design task. This is analogous to how vision-language-action (VLA) models in robotics make use of priors contained in vision-language models (VLMs) trained on internet-scale data to supply perception and reasoning and understanding information.

    Compressing the latent space of protein folding models

    A small wrinkle with directly applying this method is that the latent space of ESMFold – indeed, the latent space of many transformer-based models – requires a lot of regularization. This space is also very large, so learning this embedding ends up mapping to high-resolution image synthesis.

    To address this, we also propose CHEAP (Compressed Hourglass Embedding Adaptations of Proteins), where we learn a compression model for the joint embedding of protein sequence and structure.



    Investigating the latent space. (A) When we visualize the mean value for each channel, some channels exhibit “massive activations”. (B) If we start examining the top-3 activations compared to the median value (gray), we find that this happens over many layers. (C) Massive activations have also been observed for other transformer-based models.

    We find that this latent space is actually highly compressible. By doing a bit of mechanistic interpretability to better understand the base model that we are working with, we were able to create an all-atom protein generative model.

    What’s next?

    Though we examine the case of protein sequence and structure generation in this work, we can adapt this method to perform multi-modal generation for any modalities where there is a predictor from a more abundant modality to a less abundant one. As sequence-to-structure predictors for proteins are beginning to tackle increasingly complex systems (e.g. AlphaFold3 is also able to predict proteins in complex with nucleic acids and molecular ligands), it’s easy to imagine performing multimodal generation over more complex systems using the same method.
    If you are interested in collaborating to extend our method, or to test our method in the wet-lab, please reach out!

    Further links

    If you’ve found our papers useful in your research, please consider using the following BibTeX for PLAID and CHEAP:

    @article{lu2024generating,
      title={Generating All-Atom Protein Structure from Sequence-Only Training Data},
      author={Lu, Amy X and Yan, Wilson and Robinson, Sarah A and Yang, Kevin K and Gligorijevic, Vladimir and Cho, Kyunghyun and Bonneau, Richard and Abbeel, Pieter and Frey, Nathan},
      journal={bioRxiv},
      pages={2024--12},
      year={2024},
      publisher={Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}
    }
    
    @article{lu2024tokenized,
      title={Tokenized and Continuous Embedding Compressions of Protein Sequence and Structure},
      author={Lu, Amy X and Yan, Wilson and Yang, Kevin K and Gligorijevic, Vladimir and Cho, Kyunghyun and Abbeel, Pieter and Bonneau, Richard and Frey, Nathan},
      journal={bioRxiv},
      pages={2024--08},
      year={2024},
      publisher={Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}
    }
    

    You can also checkout our preprints (PLAID, CHEAP) and codebases (PLAID, CHEAP).

    Some bonus protein generation fun!



    Additional function-prompted generations with PLAID.




    Unconditional generation with PLAID.



    Transmembrane proteins have hydrophobic residues at the core, where it is embedded within the fatty acid layer. These are consistently observed when prompting PLAID with transmembrane protein keywords.



    Additional examples of active site recapitulation based on function keyword prompting.



    Comparing samples between PLAID and all-atom baselines. PLAID samples have better diversity and captures the beta-strand pattern that has been more difficult for protein generative models to learn.

    Acknowledgements

    Thanks to Nathan Frey for detailed feedback on this article, and to co-authors across BAIR, Genentech, Microsoft Research, and New York University: Wilson Yan, Sarah A. Robinson, Simon Kelow, Kevin K. Yang, Vladimir Gligorijevic, Kyunghyun Cho, Richard Bonneau, Pieter Abbeel, and Nathan C. Frey.

    Source: Read More 

    Facebook Twitter Reddit Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleDefending against Prompt Injection with Structured Queries (StruQ) and Preference Optimization (SecAlign)
    Next Article Scaling Up Reinforcement Learning for Traffic Smoothing: A 100-AV Highway Deployment

    Related Posts

    Artificial Intelligence

    Scaling Up Reinforcement Learning for Traffic Smoothing: A 100-AV Highway Deployment

    July 31, 2025
    Defending against Prompt Injection with Structured Queries (StruQ) and Preference Optimization (SecAlign)
    Artificial Intelligence

    Defending against Prompt Injection with Structured Queries (StruQ) and Preference Optimization (SecAlign)

    July 31, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

    Continue Reading

    How the Trump administration changed AI: A timeline

    News & Updates

    CVE-2025-4164 – PHPGurukul Employee Record Management System SQL Injection Vulnerability

    Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)

    Xbox backward compatibility isn’t dead, as VP Jason Ronald announces new open role at Microsoft — “Are you passionate about game preservation?”

    News & Updates

    15 Top Node.js Development Service Providers for Large Enterprises in 2026

    Tech & Work

    Highlights

    Kaspersky Report Reveals Growing Threat from Old Exploits and OS Vulnerabilities in Q1 2025

    June 2, 2025

    Kaspersky Report Reveals Growing Threat from Old Exploits and OS Vulnerabilities in Q1 2025

    Kaspersky’s latest “Exploits and vulnerabilities in Q1 2025” shows that attackers are doubling down on aging exploits, platform-specific weaknesses, and mismanaged updates. With over 9,700 vulnerabili …
    Read more

    Published Date:
    Jun 03, 2025 (3 hours, 12 minutes ago)

    Vulnerabilities has been mentioned in this article.

    CVE-2025-24071

    CVE-2025-21333

    CVE-2025-0282

    CVE-2024-35250

    CVE-2024-3400

    CVE-2023-48788

    CVE-2023-38831

    CVE-2023-28461

    CVE-2018-0802

    CVE-2017-11882

    Ransomware attacks on rise after hackers exploit SharePoint’s server vulnerability

    July 24, 2025

    Fortinet FortiWeb Instances Hacked With Webshells Following Public PoC Exploits

    July 16, 2025

    Build an MCP application with Mistral models on AWS

    July 10, 2025
    © DevStackTips 2025. All rights reserved.
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.