Molecular conformation generation (MCG) is a fundamental and important problem in drug discovery. Many traditional methods have been developed to solve the MCG problem, such as systematic searching, model-building, random searching, distance geometry, molecular dynamics, Monte Carlo methods, etc. However, they have some limitations depending on the molecular structures. Recently, there are plenty of deep learning based MCG methods, which claim they largely outperform the traditional methods. However, to our surprise, we design a simple and cheap algorithm (parameter-free) based on the traditional methods and find it is comparable to or even outperforms deep learning based MCG methods in the widely used GEOM-QM9 and GEOM-Drugs benchmarks. In particular, our design algorithm is simply the clustering of the RDKIT-generated conformations. We hope our findings can help the community to revise the deep learning methods for MCG. The code of the proposed algorithm could be found at https://gist.github.com/ZhouGengmo/5b565f51adafcd911c0bc115b2ef027c.
The prediction of protein-ligand binding affinity is of great significance for discovering lead compounds in drug research. Facing this challenging task, most existing prediction methods rely on the topological and/or spatial structure of molecules and the local interactions while ignoring the multi-level inter-molecular interactions between proteins and ligands, which often lead to sub-optimal performance. To solve this issue, we propose a novel global-local interaction (GLI) framework to predict protein-ligand binding affinity. In particular, our GLI framework considers the inter-molecular interactions between proteins and ligands, which involve not only the high-energy short-range interactions between closed atoms but also the low-energy long-range interactions between non-bonded atoms. For each pair of protein and ligand, our GLI embeds the long-range interactions globally and aggregates local short-range interactions, respectively. Such a joint global-local interaction modeling strategy helps to improve prediction accuracy, and the whole framework is compatible with various neural network-based modules. Experiments demonstrate that our GLI framework outperforms state-of-the-art methods with simple neural network architectures and moderate computational costs.