Tampa Bay Indian Community - tampabayIndian.com
| | | | | | | | | | | |
 


 

DeepMind AI solves 50-year-old 'protein folding problem'

United Kingdom,Science/Tech,Health/Medicine

Author : Indo Asian News Service

International, Health/Medicine, Science/Tech, National, United Kingdom Read Latest News and Articles

Share With Your Friends



Add an Article

View All Contributions

Add To My Favorite

Add A Picture

London, Dec 1 (IANS) Researchers at Google-owned Artificial Intelligence company DeepMind have solved a 50-year-old grand challenge in biology known as the "protein folding problem," revealing what shapes proteins fold into.

The latest version of DeepMind AI system, AlphaFold, has been recognised as a solution to this grand challenge by the organisers of the biennial protein-structure prediction challenge called Critical Assessment of protein Structure Prediction (CASP).

"We have been stuck on this one problem -- how do proteins fold up -- for nearly 50 years," Professor John Moult, Co-Founder and Chair of CASP, University of Maryland in the US, said in a statement.

"To see DeepMind produce a solution for this, having worked personally on this problem for so long and after so many stops and starts, wondering if we'd ever get there, is a very special moment."

This breakthrough demonstrates the impact AI can have on scientific discovery and its potential to dramatically accelerate progress in some of the most fundamental fields that explain and shape our world, DeepMind said in a blog post on Monday.

A protein's shape is closely linked with its function, and the ability to predict this structure unlocks a greater understanding of what it does and how it works.

Many of the world's greatest challenges, like developing treatments for diseases or finding enzymes that break down industrial waste, are fundamentally tied to proteins and the role they play.

The ability to computationally predict a protein's 3D structure has been a major challenge because the number of ways a protein could theoretically fold before settling into its final 3D structure is astronomical.

"Our methods may prove especially helpful for important classes of proteins, such as membrane proteins, that are very difficult to crystallise and therefore challenging to experimentally determine," the UK-based AI company said.

The results from the 14th CASP assessment were released on Monday.

DeepMind said it is preparing a paper on its system to submit to a peer-reviewed journal in due course.

--IANS

gb/bg


Copyright and Disclaimer: All news and images appearing in our news section, search engines and social media are provided by IANS. If you face any issues related to the content/images, please contact our news service provider directly. We are not liable/responsible for any content/images related to the news service provider.


Latest News

View More News


More News Articles

GT win toss, elect to bowl first against DC in Shubman Gill's 100th IPL game

Swati Sharma completed 60 parikramas around Shivling to get scene right

Ashish Vidyarthi promises untold stories from Pulwama, Balakot in 'Ranneeti'

IPL 2024: Hayden hails Pooran as 'cleanest hitter in the world' after cameo in record chase in Chepauk

Sushant Singh Rajput's pic with Dhoni and baby daughter goes viral, fans get emotional