Pep2Mol: 3D Molecule Generation Targeting Protein-Protein Interfaces with Diffusion Models

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Abstract

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are central to biological processes. Designing small molecules that modulate dysregulated PPIs holds strong promise for targeting undruggable proteins. However, existing structure-based drug design approaches focus on well-defined small-molecule binding pockets and struggle to generalize to large, shallow, and chemically complex PPI interfaces. Here, we introduce Pep2Mol, a diffusion-based generative model for 3D molecule design that targets orthosteric PPI sites by explicitly incorporating binding peptides or proteins as structural guidance, moving beyond conventional pocket-conditioned generation. To enable model development and benchmarking, we curate a large-scale, high-quality dataset of 10,956 experimentally resolved protein complex structure pairs, each pairing an orthosteric competitive ligand with a protein binder at overlapping receptor interfaces. Pep2Mol integrates two SE(3)-equivariant graph neural networks that encode protein–ligand and protein–peptide interactions respectively, and fuses these representations via attention-based conditioning to jointly guide the diffusion trajectory. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that Pep2Mol generates chemically valid ligands with state-of-the-art binding affinities, providing a strong foundation for small-molecule inhibitor design against challenging PPI interfaces.

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