Implementation of Alphafold 3 in Pytorch
You can chat with other researchers about this work here
Review of the paper by Sergey
Illustrated guide by Elana P. Simon
Talk by Max Jaderberg
A fork with full Lightning + Hydra support is being maintained by Alex at this repository
A visualization of the molecules of life used in the repository can be seen and interacted with here
Joseph for contributing the Relative Positional Encoding and the Smooth LDDT Loss!
Felipe for contributing Weighted Rigid Align, Express Coordinates In Frame, Compute Alignment Error, and Centre Random Augmentation modules!
Alex for fixing various issues in the transcribed algorithms
Heng for pointing out inconsistencies with the paper and pull requesting the solutions
Heng for finding an issue with the molecular atom indices for the distogram loss
Wei Lu for catching a few erroneous hyperparameters
Alex for the PDB dataset preparation script!
Milot for optimizing the PDB dataset clustering script!
Alex for basically writing the entire gargantuan flow from parsing the PDB all the way to the molecule and atomic inputs for training
Andrei for working on the weighted PDB dataset sampling!
Jimin for submitting a small fix to an issue with the coordinates being passed into WeightedRigidAlign
@xluo233 for contributing the confidence measures, clash penalty ranking, and sample ranking logic!
sj900 for integrating and testing the WeightedPDBSampler
within the PDBDataset
and for adding initial support for MSA and template parsing!
@xluo233 again for contributing the logic for computing the model selection score as well as the unresolved rasa!
Fandi for discovering a few inconsistencies in the elucidated atom diffusion module with the supplementary
Paolo for proposing the PDB neutral stable molecule
hypothesis!
Dhuvi for fixing a bug related to metal ion molecule ID assignment for Alphafold3Inputs
!
Dhuvi for taking on the logic for translating Alphafold3Input
to BioMolecule
for saving to mmCIF!
Tom (from the Discord channel) for identifying a discrepancy between this codebase's distogram and template unit vector computations and those of OpenFold (and Andrei for helping address the distogram issue)!
Kaihui for identifying a bug in how non-standard atoms were handled in polymer residues!
Andrei for taking on the gradio frontend interface!
Patrick for jaxtyping, Florian for einx, and of course, Alex for einops
Soumith and the Pytorch organization for giving me the opportunity to open source this work
$ pip install alphafold3-pytorch
import torch
from alphafold3_pytorch import Alphafold3
from alphafold3_pytorch.utils.model_utils import exclusive_cumsum
alphafold3 = Alphafold3(
dim_atom_inputs = 77,
dim_template_feats = 108
)
# mock inputs
seq_len = 16
molecule_atom_indices = torch.randint(0, 2, (2, seq_len)).long()
molecule_atom_lens = torch.full((2, seq_len), 2).long()
atom_seq_len = molecule_atom_lens.sum(dim=-1).amax()
atom_offsets = exclusive_cumsum(molecule_atom_lens)
atom_inputs = torch.randn(2, atom_seq_len, 77)
atompair_inputs = torch.randn(2, atom_seq_len, atom_seq_len, 5)
additional_molecule_feats = torch.randint(0, 2, (2, seq_len, 5))
additional_token_feats = torch.randn(2, seq_len, 33)
is_molecule_types = torch.randint(0, 2, (2, seq_len, 5)).bool()
is_molecule_mod = torch.randint(0, 2, (2, seq_len, 4)).bool()
molecule_ids = torch.randint(0, 32, (2, seq_len))
template_feats = torch.randn(2, 2, seq_len, seq_len, 108)
template_mask = torch.ones((2, 2)).bool()
msa = torch.randn(2, 7, seq_len, 32)
msa_mask = torch.ones((2, 7)).bool()
additional_msa_feats = torch.randn(2, 7, seq_len, 2)
# required for training, but omitted on inference
atom_pos = torch.randn(2, atom_seq_len, 3)
distogram_atom_indices = molecule_atom_lens - 1
distance_labels = torch.randint(0, 37, (2, seq_len, seq_len))
resolved_labels = torch.randint(0, 2, (2, atom_seq_len))
# offset indices correctly
distogram_atom_indices += atom_offsets
molecule_atom_indices += atom_offsets
# train
loss = alphafold3(
num_recycling_steps = 2,
atom_inputs = atom_inputs,
atompair_inputs = atompair_inputs,
molecule_ids = molecule_ids,
molecule_atom_lens = molecule_atom_lens,
additional_molecule_feats = additional_molecule_feats,
additional_msa_feats = additional_msa_feats,
additional_token_feats = additional_token_feats,
is_molecule_types = is_molecule_types,
is_molecule_mod = is_molecule_mod,
msa = msa,
msa_mask = msa_mask,
templates = template_feats,
template_mask = template_mask,
atom_pos = atom_pos,
distogram_atom_indices = distogram_atom_indices,
molecule_atom_indices = molecule_atom_indices,
distance_labels = distance_labels,
resolved_labels = resolved_labels
)
loss.backward()
# after much training ...
sampled_atom_pos = alphafold3(
num_recycling_steps = 4,
num_sample_steps = 16,
atom_inputs = atom_inputs,
atompair_inputs = atompair_inputs,
molecule_ids = molecule_ids,
molecule_atom_lens = molecule_atom_lens,
additional_molecule_feats = additional_molecule_feats,
additional_msa_feats = additional_msa_feats,
additional_token_feats = additional_token_feats,
is_molecule_types = is_molecule_types,
is_molecule_mod = is_molecule_mod,
msa = msa,
msa_mask = msa_mask,
templates = template_feats,
template_mask = template_mask
)
sampled_atom_pos.shape # (2, , 3)
An example with molecule level input handling
import torch
from alphafold3_pytorch import Alphafold3, Alphafold3Input
contrived_protein = 'AG'
mock_atompos = [
torch.randn(5, 3), # alanine has 5 non-hydrogen atoms
torch.randn(4, 3) # glycine has 4 non-hydrogen atoms
]
train_alphafold3_input = Alphafold3Input(
proteins = [contrived_protein],
atom_pos = mock_atompos
)
eval_alphafold3_input = Alphafold3Input(
proteins = [contrived_protein]
)
# training
alphafold3 = Alphafold3(
dim_atom_inputs = 3,
dim_atompair_inputs = 5,
atoms_per_window = 27,
dim_template_feats = 108,
num_molecule_mods = 0,
confidence_head_kwargs = dict(
pairformer_depth = 1
),
template_embedder_kwargs = dict(
pairformer_stack_depth = 1
),
msa_module_kwargs = dict(
depth = 1
),
pairformer_stack = dict(
depth = 2
),
diffusion_module_kwargs = dict(
atom_encoder_depth = 1,
token_transformer_depth = 1,
atom_decoder_depth = 1,
)
)
loss = alphafold3.forward_with_alphafold3_inputs([train_alphafold3_input])
loss.backward()
# sampling
alphafold3.eval()
sampled_atom_pos = alphafold3.forward_with_alphafold3_inputs(eval_alphafold3_input)
assert sampled_atom_pos.shape == (1, (5 + 4), 3)
To acquire the AlphaFold 3 PDB dataset, first download all first-assembly (and asymmetric unit) complexes in the Protein Data Bank (PDB), and then preprocess them with the script referenced below. The PDB can be downloaded from the RCSB: https://www.wwpdb.org/ftp/pdb-ftp-sites#rcsbpdb. The two Python scripts below (i.e., filter_pdb_{train,val,test}_mmcifs.py
and cluster_pdb_{train,val,test}_mmcifs.py
) assume you have downloaded the PDB in the mmCIF file format, placing its first-assembly and asymmetric unit mmCIF files at data/pdb_data/unfiltered_assembly_mmcifs/
and data/pdb_data/unfiltered_asym_mmcifs/
, respectively.
For reproducibility, we recommend downloading the PDB using AWS snapshots (e.g., 20240101
). To do so, refer to AWS's documentation to set up the AWS CLI locally. Alternatively, on the RCSB website, navigate down to "Download Protocols", and follow the download instructions depending on your location.
For example, one can use the following commands to download the PDB as two collections of mmCIF files:
# For `assembly1` complexes, use the PDB's `20240101` AWS snapshot:
aws s3 sync s3://pdbsnapshots/20240101/pub/pdb/data/assemblies/mmCIF/divided/ ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_assembly_mmcifs
# Or as a fallback, use rsync:
rsync -rlpt -v -z --delete --port=33444
rsync.rcsb.org::ftp_data/assemblies/mmCIF/divided/ ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_assembly_mmcifs/
# For asymmetric unit complexes, also use the PDB's `20240101` AWS snapshot:
aws s3 sync s3://pdbsnapshots/20240101/pub/pdb/data/structures/divided/mmCIF/ ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_asym_mmcifs
# Or as a fallback, use rsync:
rsync -rlpt -v -z --delete --port=33444
rsync.rcsb.org::ftp_data/structures/divided/mmCIF/ ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_asym_mmcifs/
WARNING: Downloading the PDB can take up to 700GB of space.
NOTE: The PDB hosts all available AWS snapshots here: https://pdbsnapshots.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/index.html.
After downloading, you should have two directories formatted like this: https://files.rcsb.org/pub/pdb/data/assemblies/mmCIF/divided/ & https://files.rcsb.org/pub/pdb/data/structures/divided/mmCIF/
00/
01/
02/
..
zz/
For these directories, unzip all the files:
find ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_assembly_mmcifs/ -type f -name "*.gz" -exec gzip -d {} ;
find ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_asym_mmcifs/ -type f -name "*.gz" -exec gzip -d {} ;
Next run the commands
wget -P ./data/ccd_data/ https://files.wwpdb.org/pub/pdb/data/monomers/components.cif.gz
wget -P ./data/ccd_data/ https://files.wwpdb.org/pub/pdb/data/component-models/complete/chem_comp_model.cif.gz
from the project's root directory to download the latest version of the PDB's Chemical Component Dictionary (CCD) and its structural models. Extract each of these files using the following command:
find data/ccd_data/ -type f -name "*.gz" -exec gzip -d {} ;
Then run the following with pdb_assembly_dir
, pdb_asym_dir
, ccd_dir
, and mmcif_output_dir
replaced with the locations of your local copies of the first-assembly PDB, asymmetric unit PDB, CCD, and your desired dataset output directory (i.e., ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_assembly_mmcifs/
, ./data/pdb_data/unfiltered_asym_mmcifs/
, ./data/ccd_data/
, and ./data/pdb_data/{train,val,test}_mmcifs/
).
python scripts/filter_pdb_train_mmcifs.py --mmcif_assembly_dir <pdb_assembly_dir> --mmcif_asym_dir <pdb_asym_dir> --ccd_dir <ccd_dir> --output_dir <mmcif_output_dir>
python scripts/filter_pdb_val_mmcifs.py --mmcif_assembly_dir <pdb_assembly_dir> --mmcif_asym_dir <pdb_asym_dir> --output_dir <mmcif_output_dir>
python scripts/filter_pdb_test_mmcifs.py --mmcif_assembly_dir <pdb_assembly_dir> --mmcif_asym_dir <pdb_asym_dir> --output_dir <mmcif_output_dir>
See the scripts for more options. Each first-assembly mmCIF that successfully passes
all processing steps will be written to mmcif_output_dir
within a subdirectory
named according to the mmCIF's second and third PDB ID characters (e.g. 5c
).
Next, run the following with mmcif_dir
and {train,val,test}_clustering_output_dir
replaced, respectively, with your local output directory created using the dataset filtering script above and with your desired clustering output directories (i.e., ./data/pdb_data/{train,val,test}_mmcifs/
and ./data/pdb_data/data_caches/{train,val,test}_clusterings/
):
python scripts/cluster_pdb_train_mmcifs.py --mmcif_dir <mmcif_dir> --output_dir <train_clustering_output_dir> --clustering_filtered_pdb_dataset
python scripts/cluster_pdb_val_mmcifs.py --mmcif_dir <mmcif_dir> --reference_clustering_dir <train_clustering_output_dir> --output_dir <val_clustering_output_dir> --clustering_filtered_pdb_dataset
python scripts/cluster_pdb_test_mmcifs.py --mmcif_dir <mmcif_dir> --reference_1_clustering_dir <train_clustering_output_dir> --reference_2_clustering_dir <val_clustering_output_dir> --output_dir <test_clustering_output_dir> --clustering_filtered_pdb_dataset
Note: The --clustering_filtered_pdb_dataset
flag is recommended when clustering the filtered PDB dataset as curated using the scripts above, as this flag will enable faster runtimes in this context (since filtering leaves each chain's residue IDs 1-based). However, this flag must not be provided when clustering other (i.e., non-PDB) datasets of mmCIF files. Otherwise, interface clustering may be performed incorrectly, as these datasets' mmCIF files may not use strict 1-based residue indexing for each chain.
Note: One can instead download preprocessed (i.e., filtered) mmCIF (train
/val
/test
) files (~25GB, comprising 148k complexes) and chain/interface clustering (train
/val
/test
) files (~3GB) for the PDB's 20240101
AWS snapshot via a shared OneDrive folder. Each of these tar.gz
archives should be decompressed within the data/pdb_data/
directory e.g., via tar -xzf data_caches.tar.gz -C data/pdb_data/
. One can also download and prepare PDB distillation data using as a reference the script scripts/distillation_data_download.sh
. Once downloaded, one can run scripts/reduce_uniprot_predictions_to_pdb.py
to filter this dataset to only examples associated with at least one PDB entry. Moreover, for convenience, a mapping of UniProt accession IDs to PDB IDs for training on PDB distillation data has already been downloaded and extracted as data/afdb_data/data_caches/uniprot_to_pdb_id_mapping.dat
.
At the project root, run
$ sh ./contribute.sh
Then, add your module to alphafold3_pytorch/alphafold3.py
, add your tests to tests/test_af3.py
, and submit a pull request. You can run the tests locally with
$ pytest tests/
The included Dockerfile
contains the required dependencies to run the package and to train/inference using PyTorch with GPUs.
The default base image is pytorch/pytorch:2.3.0-cuda12.1-cudnn8-runtime
and installs the latest version of this package from the main
GitHub branch.
## Build Docker Container
docker build -t af3 .
Alternatively, use build arguments to rebuild the image with different software versions:
PYTORCH_TAG
: Changes the base image and thus builds with different PyTorch, CUDA, and/or cuDNN versions.GIT_TAG
: Changes the tag of this repo to clone and install the package.For example:
## Use build argument to change versions
docker build --build-arg "PYTORCH_TAG=2.2.1-cuda12.1-cudnn8-devel" --build-arg "GIT_TAG=0.1.15" -t af3 .
Then, run the container with GPUs and mount a local volume (for training) using the following command:
## Run Container
docker run -v .:/data --gpus all -it af3
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