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Deep learning models for predicting RNA degradation via dual crowdsourcing.

Hannah K Wayment-SteeleWipapat KladwangAndrew M WatkinsDo Soon KimBojan TunguzWalter ReadeMaggie DemkinJonathan RomanoRoger Wellington-OguriJohn J NicolJiayang GaoKazuki OnoderaKazuki FujikawaHanfei MaoGilles VandewieleMichele TintiBram SteenwinckelTakuya ItoTaiga NoumiShujun HeKeiichiro IshiYouhan LeeFatih ÖztürkKing Yuen ChiuEmin ÖztürkKarim AmerMohamed Faresnull nullRachel J Hagey
Published in: Nature machine intelligence (2022)
Medicines based on messenger RNA (mRNA) hold immense potential, as evidenced by their rapid deployment as COVID-19 vaccines. However, worldwide distribution of mRNA molecules has been limited by their thermostability, which is fundamentally limited by the intrinsic instability of RNA molecules to a chemical degradation reaction called in-line hydrolysis. Predicting the degradation of an RNA molecule is a key task in designing more stable RNA-based therapeutics. Here, we describe a crowdsourced machine learning competition ('Stanford OpenVaccine') on Kaggle, involving single-nucleotide resolution measurements on 6,043 diverse 102-130-nucleotide RNA constructs that were themselves solicited through crowdsourcing on the RNA design platform Eterna. The entire experiment was completed in less than 6 months, and 41% of nucleotide-level predictions from the winning model were within experimental error of the ground truth measurement. Furthermore, these models generalized to blindly predicting orthogonal degradation data on much longer mRNA molecules (504-1,588 nucleotides) with improved accuracy compared with previously published models. These results indicate that such models can represent in-line hydrolysis with excellent accuracy, supporting their use for designing stabilized messenger RNAs. The integration of two crowdsourcing platforms, one for dataset creation and another for machine learning, may be fruitful for other urgent problems that demand scientific discovery on rapid timescales.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • small molecule
  • sars cov
  • coronavirus disease
  • mental health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • artificial intelligence
  • big data
  • systematic review
  • climate change