Install alphafold on the local machine, get out of docker.

Overview

header

AlphaFold

This package provides an implementation of the inference pipeline of AlphaFold v2.0. This is a completely new model that was entered in CASP14 and published in Nature. For simplicity, we refer to this model as AlphaFold throughout the rest of this document.

Any publication that discloses findings arising from using this source code or the model parameters should cite the AlphaFold paper.

CASP14 predictions

First time setup

The following steps are required in order to run AlphaFold:

Install on Ubuntu

  1. Requirements

  2. Install softwares

    git clone https://github.com/kuixu/alphafold.git
    cd alphafold
    
    ./install_on_local.sh

    or step by step

        
    conda create -n af2 python=3.8 -y
    conda activate af2
    
    conda install -y -c nvidia cudnn==8.0.4
    conda install -y -c bioconda hmmer hhsuite==3.3.0 kalign2
    
    conda install -y -c conda-forge \
        openmm=7.5.1 \
        pdbfixer \
        pip
    
    # python pkgs
    pip3 install --upgrade pip \
        && pip3 install -r ./requirements.txt \
        && pip3 install --upgrade "jax[cuda111]" -f \
        https://storage.googleapis.com/jax-releases/jax_releases.html
    
    # work_path=/path/to/alphafold-code
    work_path=$(PWD)
    
    # update openmm 
    a=$(which python)
    cd $(dirname $(dirname $a))/lib/python3.8/site-packages
    patch -p0 < $work_path/docker/openmm.patch
    
    
    
  3. Download genetic databases (see below).

  4. Download model parameters (see below).

  5. Set path.

    # Set to target of scripts/download_all_databases.sh
    DOWNLOAD_DIR = '/path/to/database'
    
    # Path to a directory that will store the results.
    output_dir = '/path/to/output_dir'
    
    

Genetic databases

This step requires rsync and aria2c to be installed on your machine.

AlphaFold needs multiple genetic (sequence) databases to run:

We provide a script scripts/download_all_data.sh that can be used to download and set up all of these databases. This should take 8–12 hours.

📒 Note: The total download size is around 428 GB and the total size when unzipped is 2.2 TB. Please make sure you have a large enough hard drive space, bandwidth and time to download.

This script will also download the model parameter files. Once the script has finished, you should have the following directory structure:

$DOWNLOAD_DIR/                             # Total: ~ 2.2 TB (download: 428 GB)
    bfd/                                   # ~ 1.8 TB (download: 271.6 GB)
        # 6 files.
    mgnify/                                # ~ 64 GB (download: 32.9 GB)
        mgy_clusters.fa
    params/                                # ~ 3.5 GB (download: 3.5 GB)
        # 5 CASP14 models,
        # 5 pTM models,
        # LICENSE,
        # = 11 files.
    pdb70/                                 # ~ 56 GB (download: 19.5 GB)
        # 9 files.
    pdb_mmcif/                             # ~ 206 GB (download: 46 GB)
        mmcif_files/
            # About 180,000 .cif files.
        obsolete.dat
    uniclust30/                            # ~ 87 GB (download: 24.9 GB)
        uniclust30_2018_08/
            # 13 files.
    uniref90/                              # ~ 59 GB (download: 29.7 GB)
        uniref90.fasta

Model parameters

While the AlphaFold code is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License, the AlphaFold parameters are made available for non-commercial use only under the terms of the CC BY-NC 4.0 license. Please see the Disclaimer below for more detail.

The AlphaFold parameters are available from https://storage.googleapis.com/alphafold/alphafold_params_2021-07-14.tar, and are downloaded as part of the scripts/download_all_data.sh script. This script will download parameters for:

  • 5 models which were used during CASP14, and were extensively validated for structure prediction quality (see Jumper et al. 2021, Suppl. Methods 1.12 for details).
  • 5 pTM models, which were fine-tuned to produce pTM (predicted TM-score) and predicted aligned error values alongside their structure predictions (see Jumper et al. 2021, Suppl. Methods 1.9.7 for details).

Running AlphaFold on local

  1. Clone this repository and cd into it.

  2. Run run_alphafold.py pointing to a FASTA file containing the protein sequence for which you wish to predict the structure. If you are predicting the structure of a protein that is already in PDB and you wish to avoid using it as a template, then max_template_date must be set to be before the release date of the structure. For example, for the T1050 CASP14 target:

    python3 run_alphafold.py --fasta_paths=T1050.fasta --max_template_date=2020-05-14
    # or simply
    exp/run_local.sh T1050.fasta

    By default, Alphafold will attempt to use all visible GPU devices. To use a subset, specify a comma-separated list of GPU UUID(s) or index(es) using the CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0.

  3. You can control AlphaFold speed / quality tradeoff by adding either --preset=full_dbs or --preset=casp14 to the run command. We provide the following presets:

    • casp14: This preset uses the same settings as were used in CASP14. It runs with all genetic databases and with 8 ensemblings.
    • full_dbs: The model in this preset is 8 times faster than the casp14 preset with a very minor quality drop (-0.1 average GDT drop on CASP14 domains). It runs with all genetic databases and with no ensembling.

    Running the command above with the casp14 preset would look like this:

    python3 docker/run_docker.py --fasta_paths=T1050.fasta --max_template_date=2020-05-14 --preset=casp14

AlphaFold output

The outputs will be in a subfolder of output_dir in run_docker.py. They include the computed MSAs, unrelaxed structures, relaxed structures, ranked structures, raw model outputs, prediction metadata, and section timings. The output_dir directory will have the following structure:

output_dir/
    features.pkl
    ranked_{0,1,2,3,4}.pdb
    ranking_debug.json
    relaxed_model_{1,2,3,4,5}.pdb
    result_model_{1,2,3,4,5}.pkl
    timings.json
    unrelaxed_model_{1,2,3,4,5}.pdb
    msas/
        bfd_uniclust_hits.a3m
        mgnify_hits.sto
        uniref90_hits.sto

The contents of each output file are as follows:

  • features.pkl – A pickle file containing the input feature Numpy arrays used by the models to produce the structures.
  • unrelaxed_model_*.pdb – A PDB format text file containing the predicted structure, exactly as outputted by the model.
  • relaxed_model_*.pdb – A PDB format text file containing the predicted structure, after performing an Amber relaxation procedure on the unrelaxed structure prediction, see Jumper et al. 2021, Suppl. Methods 1.8.6 for details.
  • ranked_*.pdb – A PDB format text file containing the relaxed predicted structures, after reordering by model confidence. Here ranked_0.pdb should contain the prediction with the highest confidence, and ranked_4.pdb the prediction with the lowest confidence. To rank model confidence, we use predicted LDDT (pLDDT), see Jumper et al. 2021, Suppl. Methods 1.9.6 for details.
  • ranking_debug.json – A JSON format text file containing the pLDDT values used to perform the model ranking, and a mapping back to the original model names.
  • timings.json – A JSON format text file containing the times taken to run each section of the AlphaFold pipeline.
  • msas/ - A directory containing the files describing the various genetic tool hits that were used to construct the input MSA.
  • result_model_*.pkl – A pickle file containing a nested dictionary of the various Numpy arrays directly produced by the model. In addition to the output of the structure module, this includes auxiliary outputs such as distograms and pLDDT scores. If using the pTM models then the pTM logits will also be contained in this file.

This code has been tested to match mean top-1 accuracy on a CASP14 test set with pLDDT ranking over 5 model predictions (some CASP targets were run with earlier versions of AlphaFold and some had manual interventions; see our forthcoming publication for details). Some targets such as T1064 may also have high individual run variance over random seeds.

Inferencing many proteins

The provided inference script is optimized for predicting the structure of a single protein, and it will compile the neural network to be specialized to exactly the size of the sequence, MSA, and templates. For large proteins, the compile time is a negligible fraction of the runtime, but it may become more significant for small proteins or if the multi-sequence alignments are already precomputed. In the bulk inference case, it may make sense to use our make_fixed_size function to pad the inputs to a uniform size, thereby reducing the number of compilations required.

We do not provide a bulk inference script, but it should be straightforward to develop on top of the RunModel.predict method with a parallel system for precomputing multi-sequence alignments. Alternatively, this script can be run repeatedly with only moderate overhead.

Note on reproducibility

AlphaFold's output for a small number of proteins has high inter-run variance, and may be affected by changes in the input data. The CASP14 target T1064 is a notable example; the large number of SARS-CoV-2-related sequences recently deposited changes its MSA significantly. This variability is somewhat mitigated by the model selection process; running 5 models and taking the most confident.

To reproduce the results of our CASP14 system as closely as possible you must use the same database versions we used in CASP. These may not match the default versions downloaded by our scripts.

For genetics:

For templates:

  • PDB: (downloaded 2020-05-14)
  • PDB70: (downloaded 2020-05-13)

An alternative for templates is to use the latest PDB and PDB70, but pass the flag --max_template_date=2020-05-14, which restricts templates only to structures that were available at the start of CASP14.

Citing this work

If you use the code or data in this package, please cite:

@Article{AlphaFold2021,
  author  = {Jumper, John and Evans, Richard and Pritzel, Alexander and Green, Tim and Figurnov, Michael and Ronneberger, Olaf and Tunyasuvunakool, Kathryn and Bates, Russ and {\v{Z}}{\'\i}dek, Augustin and Potapenko, Anna and Bridgland, Alex and Meyer, Clemens and Kohl, Simon A A and Ballard, Andrew J and Cowie, Andrew and Romera-Paredes, Bernardino and Nikolov, Stanislav and Jain, Rishub and Adler, Jonas and Back, Trevor and Petersen, Stig and Reiman, David and Clancy, Ellen and Zielinski, Michal and Steinegger, Martin and Pacholska, Michalina and Berghammer, Tamas and Bodenstein, Sebastian and Silver, David and Vinyals, Oriol and Senior, Andrew W and Kavukcuoglu, Koray and Kohli, Pushmeet and Hassabis, Demis},
  journal = {Nature},
  title   = {Highly accurate protein structure prediction with {AlphaFold}},
  year    = {2021},
  doi     = {10.1038/s41586-021-03819-2},
  note    = {(Accelerated article preview)},
}

Acknowledgements

AlphaFold communicates with and/or references the following separate libraries and packages:

We thank all their contributors and maintainers!

License and Disclaimer

This is not an officially supported Google product.

Copyright 2021 DeepMind Technologies Limited.

AlphaFold Code License

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

Model Parameters License

The AlphaFold parameters are made available for non-commercial use only, under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) license. You can find details at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode

Third-party software

Use of the third-party software, libraries or code referred to in the Acknowledgements section above may be governed by separate terms and conditions or license provisions. Your use of the third-party software, libraries or code is subject to any such terms and you should check that you can comply with any applicable restrictions or terms and conditions before use.

Owner
Kui Xu
Researcher, interested in Computational Biology, and 3D Computer Vision.
Kui Xu
This is the official code for the paper "Learning with Nested Scene Modeling and Cooperative Architecture Search for Low-Light Vision"

RUAS This is the official code for the paper "Learning with Nested Scene Modeling and Cooperative Architecture Search for Low-Light Vision" A prelimin

Vision & Optimization Group (VOG) 2 May 05, 2022
CLIP-GEN: Language-Free Training of a Text-to-Image Generator with CLIP

CLIP-GEN [简体中文][English] 本项目在萤火二号集群上用 PyTorch 实现了论文 《CLIP-GEN: Language-Free Training of a Text-to-Image Generator with CLIP》。 CLIP-GEN 是一个 Language-F

75 Dec 29, 2022
ExCon: Explanation-driven Supervised Contrastive Learning

ExCon: Explanation-driven Supervised Contrastive Learning Link to the paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2111.14271.pdf Contributors of this repo: Zhibo Zha

Zhibo (Darren) Zhang 18 Nov 01, 2022
A collection of implementations of deep domain adaptation algorithms

Deep Transfer Learning on PyTorch This is a PyTorch library for deep transfer learning. We divide the code into two aspects: Single-source Unsupervise

Yongchun Zhu 647 Jan 03, 2023
potpourri3d - An invigorating blend of 3D geometry tools in Python.

A Python library of various algorithms and utilities for 3D triangle meshes and point clouds. Managed by Nicholas Sharp, with new tools added lazily as needed. Currently, mainly bindings to C++ tools

Nicholas Sharp 295 Jan 05, 2023
Code for "Learning Structural Edits via Incremental Tree Transformations" (ICLR'21)

Learning Structural Edits via Incremental Tree Transformations Code for "Learning Structural Edits via Incremental Tree Transformations" (ICLR'21) 1.

NeuLab 40 Dec 23, 2022
2 Jul 19, 2022
Implement slightly different caffe-segnet in tensorflow

Tensorflow-SegNet Implement slightly different (see below for detail) SegNet in tensorflow, successfully trained segnet-basic in CamVid dataset. Due t

Tseng Kuan Lun 364 Oct 27, 2022
Informer: Beyond Efficient Transformer for Long Sequence Time-Series Forecasting

Informer: Beyond Efficient Transformer for Long Sequence Time-Series Forecasting This is the origin Pytorch implementation of Informer in the followin

Haoyi 3.1k Dec 29, 2022
BT-Unet: A-Self-supervised-learning-framework-for-biomedical-image-segmentation-using-Barlow-Twins

BT-Unet: A-Self-supervised-learning-framework-for-biomedical-image-segmentation-using-Barlow-Twins Deep learning has brought most profound contributio

Narinder Singh Punn 12 Dec 04, 2022
基于Pytorch实现优秀的自然图像分割框架!(包括FCN、U-Net和Deeplab)

语义分割学习实验-基于VOC数据集 usage: 下载VOC数据集,将JPEGImages SegmentationClass两个文件夹放入到data文件夹下。 终端切换到目标目录,运行python train.py -h查看训练 (torch) Li Xiang 28 Dec 21, 2022

Web-interface + rest API for classification and regression (https://jeff1evesque.github.io/machine-learning.docs)

Machine Learning This project provides a web-interface, as well as a programmatic-api for various machine learning algorithms. Supported algorithms: S

Jeff Levesque 252 Dec 11, 2022
This repository contains the implementation of the following paper: Cross-Descriptor Visual Localization and Mapping

Cross-Descriptor Visual Localization and Mapping This repository contains the implementation of the following paper: "Cross-Descriptor Visual Localiza

Mihai Dusmanu 81 Oct 06, 2022
Simultaneous NMT/MMT framework in PyTorch

This repository includes the codes, the experiment configurations and the scripts to prepare/download data for the Simultaneous Machine Translation wi

<a href=[email protected]"> 37 Sep 29, 2022
Implementation of the ALPHAMEPOL algorithm, presented in Unsupervised Reinforcement Learning in Multiple Environments.

ALPHAMEPOL This repository contains the implementation of the ALPHAMEPOL algorithm, presented in Unsupervised Reinforcement Learning in Multiple Envir

3 Dec 23, 2021
CLIPImageClassifier wraps clip image model from transformers

CLIPImageClassifier CLIPImageClassifier wraps clip image model from transformers. CLIPImageClassifier is initialized with the argument classes, these

Jina AI 6 Sep 12, 2022
QuadTree Attention for Vision Transformers (ICLR2022)

This repository contains codes for quadtree attention. This repo contains codes for feature matching, image classficiation, object detection and seman

tangshitao 222 Dec 28, 2022
Official Pytorch implementation for 2021 ICCV paper "Learning Motion Priors for 4D Human Body Capture in 3D Scenes" and trained models / data

Learning Motion Priors for 4D Human Body Capture in 3D Scenes (LEMO) Official Pytorch implementation for 2021 ICCV (oral) paper "Learning Motion Prior

165 Dec 19, 2022
Regularized Frank-Wolfe for Dense CRFs: Generalizing Mean Field and Beyond

CRF - Conditional Random Fields A library for dense conditional random fields (CRFs). This is the official accompanying code for the paper Regularized

Đ.Khuê Lê-Huu 21 Nov 26, 2022
A Lightweight Face Recognition and Facial Attribute Analysis (Age, Gender, Emotion and Race) Library for Python

deepface Deepface is a lightweight face recognition and facial attribute analysis (age, gender, emotion and race) framework for python. It is a hybrid

Sefik Ilkin Serengil 5.2k Jan 02, 2023