The algebraic extended atom-type graph-based model for precise ligand-receptor binding affinity prediction

J Cheminform. 2025 Jan 22;17(1):10. doi: 10.1186/s13321-025-00955-z.

Abstract

Accurate prediction of ligand-receptor binding affinity is crucial in structure-based drug design, significantly impacting the development of effective drugs. Recent advances in machine learning (ML)-based scoring functions have improved these predictions, yet challenges remain in modeling complex molecular interactions. This study introduces the AGL-EAT-Score, a scoring function that integrates extended atom-type multiscale weighted colored subgraphs with algebraic graph theory. This approach leverages the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of graph Laplacian and adjacency matrices to capture high-level details of specific atom pairwise interactions. Evaluated against benchmark datasets such as CASF-2016, CASF-2013, and the Cathepsin S dataset, the AGL-EAT-Score demonstrates notable accuracy, outperforming existing traditional and ML-based methods. The model's strength lies in its comprehensive similarity analysis, examining protein sequence, ligand structure, and binding site similarities, thus ensuring minimal bias and over-representation in the training sets. The use of extended atom types in graph coloring enhances the model's capability to capture the intricacies of protein-ligand interactions. The AGL-EAT-Score marks a significant advancement in drug design, offering a tool that could potentially refine and accelerate the drug discovery process.Scientific Contribution The AGL-EAT-Score presents an algebraic graph-based framework that predicts ligand-receptor binding affinity by constructing multiscale weighted colored subgraphs from the 3D structure of protein-ligand complexes. It improves prediction accuracy by modeling interactions between extended atom types, addressing challenges like dataset bias and over-representation. Benchmark evaluations demonstrate that AGL-EAT-Score outperforms existing methods, offering a robust and systematic tool for structure-based drug design.

Keywords: Algebraic graph learning; Binding affinity predictions; Extended atom type; Non-redundant training sets; Protein-ligand interactions; Similarity computation.