Submitted by Dr_Singularity t3_yk4ono in singularity
styxboa t1_ivbtzsu wrote
Reply to comment by Better_Engine_8537 in Meta's newest AI determines proper protein folds 60 times faster by Dr_Singularity
can you explain to me what folding is (zoomed out view), why we can't solve it yet, what it would take to solve it, why it's important to solve, estimates on when it will be solved, etc?
Every article I read on it is so complex that i'm not sure exactly what it is in the first place or why it's important
Better_Engine_8537 t1_iy25xwx wrote
I'm really not an expert on folding. I see it like this. Imagine taking everything in your pots and pans drawer out and tying them together with string. What would be the best arrangement for them to fit back in the drawer? The string makes it hard to maneuvere the pans around and the order matters a lot. Solutions to fit them into a drawer would be hard to calculate, but the solution would be that which would fit in the smallest drawer. Proteins are a string of amino acids which can move in many different ways. They form a structure which is in the minimum energy state. To solve it, you guess a structure and calculate the energy. You do this for all possible structures. Nature somehow always picks the structure with the lowest energy. Structures can also be determined experimentally. We can't solve it yet because the calculations take so long using the models we have. Using AI they look at previously determined results to make pretty good guesses for other proteins. To solve it I would guess the AI model needs more, maybe different or additional data. Or mathematical models and calculations could be improved or everything combined. I don't know. It is important because things like curing cancer and killing viruses can be done with a better understanding of how proteins interact with each other of which folding is a part.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments