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ProtTrans: Toward Understanding the Language of Life Through Self-Supervised Learning

Cited 190 time in Web of Science Cited 319 time in Scopus
Authors

Elnaggar, Ahmed; Heinzinger, Michael; Dallago, Christian; Rehawi, Ghalia; Yu, Wang; Jones, Llion; Gibbs, Tom; Feher, Tamas; Angerer, Christoph; Steinegger, Martin; Bhowmik, Debsindhu; Rost, Burkhard

Issue Date
2022-10
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, Vol.44 No.10, pp.7112-7127
Abstract
Computational biology and bioinformatics provide vast data gold-mines from protein sequences, ideal for Language Models (LMs) taken from Natural Language Processing (NLP). These LMs reach for new prediction frontiers at low inference costs. Here, we trained two auto-regressive models (Transformer-XL, XLNet) and four auto-encoder models (BERT, Albert, Electra, T5) on data from UniRef and BFD containing up to 393 billion amino acids. The protein LMs (pLMs) were trained on the Summit supercomputer using 5616 GPUs and TPU Pod up-to 1024 cores. Dimensionality reduction revealed that the raw pLM-embeddings from unlabeled data captured some biophysical features of protein sequences. We validated the advantage of using the embeddings as exclusive input for several subsequent tasks: (1) a per-residue (per-token) prediction of protein secondary structure (3-state accuracy Q3=81%-87%); (2) per-protein (pooling) predictions of protein sub-cellular location (ten-state accuracy: Q10=81%) and membrane versus water-soluble (2-state accuracy Q2=91%). For secondary structure, the most informative embeddings (ProtT5) for the first time outperformed the state-of-the-art without multiple sequence alignments (MSAs) or evolutionary information thereby bypassing expensive database searches. Taken together, the results implied that pLMs learned some of the grammar of the language of life. All our models are available through https://github.com/agemagician/ProtTrans.
ISSN
0162-8828
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/202521
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TPAMI.2021.3095381
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Development of algorithms to search, cluster and assemble sequence data, Metagenomic analysis, Pathogen detection in sequencing data

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