DeepMind AlphaFold 3 - This Will Change Everything!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 7. 05. 2024
  • 📝 Check out AlphaFold 3 here:
    dpmd.ai/yt-tmp-alphafold3
    📝 Or try it out through AlphaFold server for free:
    alphafoldserver.com/
    This video was made in partnership with Google DeepMind.
    My paper on simulations that look almost like reality is available for free here:
    rdcu.be/cWPfD
    Or this is the orig. Nature Physics link with clickable citations:
    www.nature.com/articles/s4156...
    🙏 We would like to thank our generous Patreon supporters who make Two Minute Papers possible:
    Alex Balfanz, Alex Haro, B Shang, Benji Rabhan, Gaston Ingaramo, Gordon Child, John Le, Kyle Davis, Lukas Biewald, Martin, Michael Albrecht, Michael Tedder, Owen Skarpness, Richard Sundvall, Taras Bobrovytsky, Ted Johnson, Thomas Krcmar, Tybie Fitzhugh, Ueli Gallizzi.
    If you wish to appear here or pick up other perks, click here: / twominutepapers
    Thumbnail background design: Felícia Zsolnai-Fehér - felicia.hu
    Károly Zsolnai-Fehér's research works: cg.tuwien.ac.at/~zsolnai/
    Twitter: / twominutepapers
    #AlphaFold3 #AlphaFold
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 610

  • @Hitjuich
    @Hitjuich Před 28 dny +667

    Alphafold changed bìotechnology forever. This is huge! Looking forward to working with the new version

    • @Z0MBUSTER
      @Z0MBUSTER Před 28 dny +5

      Could it be also used as "chemtrails" to "eat" CO2 from the atmosphere to transform it into a harmless gas?

    • @ScottzPlaylists
      @ScottzPlaylists Před 28 dny +1

      ​@@Z0MBUSTER God designed molecular nanomachines to do that, it's called photosynthesis❗
      No human involvement needed. If we have twice the Co2 in the air one day, plants will grow twice as fast.
      Co2 is a harmless gas --- and we would die without it. Don't believe the propaganda. Historically, Co2 levels have been much higher in the far past. ❗❗❗❗❗❗

    • @dertythegrower
      @dertythegrower Před 28 dny

      We have done this foldingathome using gpu since 2002... hardforums team, especially. We used to teach people how to do it at home, long before bitcoin mining using gpu, which we did back when bitcoins were useless except to other bitcoiners.

    • @dertythegrower
      @dertythegrower Před 28 dny +6

      ​@@Z0MBUSTER co2 is not the issue, its methane... many commercial growers ON CZcams dump co2 into grow areas, and a lot of it escapes. Methane from factories and smog byproducts is far worse....and a major concern, which breaks down into more co2, ironically.. you can capture it in a balloon shape object, and power generators. Methane is 28x worse greenhouse gas than co2.

    • @juhor.7594
      @juhor.7594 Před 28 dny +5

      ​@@Z0MBUSTERone big problem with this kind of climate engineering is that it's hard to predict what long term side-effects it can have. I imagine that the plastic-digesting example can't be used outside of highly controlled environments.

  • @itsjusttmanakatech1162
    @itsjusttmanakatech1162 Před 28 dny +1251

    I wasn’t impressed until I heard AlphaFold had implemented Dark Mode. What a time to be alive!

    • @austinvw1988
      @austinvw1988 Před 28 dny +13

      I was literally about to make a joke lol

    • @Ren33469
      @Ren33469 Před 28 dny +10

      I've been waiting for BOINC to add dark mode for a while😂

    • @hrihori_art
      @hrihori_art Před 28 dny

      "Dark Reader" extension for browser (free)

    • @snooks5607
      @snooks5607 Před 28 dny +8

      fairly big reason for why I've been using mostly linux since the 90s was inability to control blinding background colors in other OSes. now 20+ years later windows11 and macos are finally able to display most window contents with dark background, it was a pretty momentous achievement (their highly paid UI/usability "experts" are idiots)

    • @crubs83
      @crubs83 Před 28 dny +20

      Just imagine where we'll be just two papers down the line!

  • @Favmir
    @Favmir Před 28 dny +522

    4 minutes earlier than the official Google deepmind channel? That was indeed fast, you're right

    • @TwoMinutePapers
      @TwoMinutePapers  Před 28 dny +94

      🙂

    • @JohnDontFollowMe
      @JohnDontFollowMe Před 28 dny +56

      TwoMinutePapers be like: *sniffs white substance*, "lets read these papers!"

    • @asdads3948
      @asdads3948 Před 28 dny +11

      @@JohnDontFollowMe I think our man needs the white substance to get *down* after reading a really good paper.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před 27 dny +10

      @@JohnDontFollowMe 2MP needs not the "white substance".
      Bro Fahir has the spice melange..... he IS the Kwisatz Haderach! 😁

  • @realmetatron
    @realmetatron Před 28 dny +188

    Version 4 can fold your laundry. Version 5 can cut onions without crying.

    • @xaroz904
      @xaroz904 Před 28 dny +15

      version 6 can out-pizza the hut

    • @marcomoon6062
      @marcomoon6062 Před 26 dny

      Wearing contacts keeps you from crying over dead onions

    • @EdT.-xt6yv
      @EdT.-xt6yv Před 20 dny

      Version 8 will get the fusion reactor going,,,

  • @merlijnfolkerts3066
    @merlijnfolkerts3066 Před 28 dny +214

    Stuff like this saving lives is why i am going to study artificial intelligence when im out of highschool

    • @TwoMinutePapers
      @TwoMinutePapers  Před 28 dny +57

      This really made my day. Thank you so much! 🙏

    • @pandoraeeris7860
      @pandoraeeris7860 Před 28 dny +49

      Artificial intelligence will study YOU!

    • @gato_omega
      @gato_omega Před 28 dny +19

      you could already begin studying it! I started learning how to program even before high-school , and I now realize that although I didn't have a real clue of what I was doing back then, it actually helps a lot to already be in the water 😃

    • @MecchaKakkoi
      @MecchaKakkoi Před 28 dny +12

      Why wait?! 🙂 A good grounding in high school maths will get you a long way in AI

    • @KatoNamus
      @KatoNamus Před 28 dny +2

      This is where you learn to be a wizard, Harry! (PS: Ignore the trolls under the bridge, concentrate on your studies).

  • @johnjones8330
    @johnjones8330 Před 28 dny +202

    This is Nobel prize, Turing award level work and “Dark mode!” Life is strange.

    • @dibbidydoo4318
      @dibbidydoo4318 Před 28 dny +5

      well you don't award those until after the chickens hatch then you count them.

    • @LarsRyeJeppesen
      @LarsRyeJeppesen Před 28 dny +16

      Dark Mode alone is enough for a Nobel Prize

  • @thunderinvader9031
    @thunderinvader9031 Před 28 dny +196

    What a time to hold on to my papers

  • @ElOroDelTigre
    @ElOroDelTigre Před 27 dny +67

    I'm around 50 now and seeing that the field I love is doing real change (not in a "generating revenue" way, but in actual "improving humankind" way) brings a tear to my eye. Maybe a 20-something years old kid does not realize how big this is, but for me it is, truly and marvelously, an amazing time to be alive. Gives me a bit of hope that before I kick the bucket I'll get to see some of that utopian advancement and eradication of diseases we used to dream about.

    • @_sky_3123
      @_sky_3123 Před 26 dny +8

      I am 30 ad I too am amaized. I remember reading SCI-Fi books where we were able to simulate proteins and their interaction. And you could give a cancer genome to the computer and it would give you a blueprint for protein that is poisonous to the cancer, but not to the host. (So like a perfect cancer treatment, you just had to drink/inject the "poison" :D)
      And now I might live to see something like that come to life.

    • @tortysoft
      @tortysoft Před 24 dny +3

      @@_sky_3123 I'm 66 :-) Need I say more? I hope I can extend my time being alive.
      Could it fix Long Covid please? I'm less than a bit alive at the moment, I'm after quality rather than length, but I'll be happy with both !

    • @ksprdk
      @ksprdk Před 23 dny

      What could be a scenario that you could imagine happening now after this? And when? :)

    • @ronankearns381
      @ronankearns381 Před 22 dny

      20 smth college grads are developing AI lol

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 Před 21 dnem

      I'm 45 and hope that this means that our generation will not have to endure the chronic illnesses of old age that plagued our grandparents and are hitting our parents now. Maybe this means Alzheimer's and dementia will not end up costing TRIPLE what it currently does by 2050, which it will according to current predictions. And maybe even reverse aging to some extent.
      AlphaFold - 2018. AlphaFold 2 - 2020. AlphaFold 3 - 2024. Nobody saw anyo of this coming a whole _six years ago._Who even knows what's coming now.

  •  Před 28 dny +371

    Bet AplhaFold 6 will be folding reality itself 😎

    • @Argh0pirata
      @Argh0pirata Před 28 dny +17

      not if it keeps being closed-source with carefully curated examples

    • @user-aeb87825
      @user-aeb87825 Před 28 dny +1

      It will fold my mind into smithereens.

    • @frederickmiller6431
      @frederickmiller6431 Před 28 dny

      You are AlphaCreate 6 duhh this is what the Egyptians knew how to craft reality

    • @thegreenxeno9430
      @thegreenxeno9430 Před 28 dny

      Alphafold 6? More like Betafold 2

    • @NuclearTopSpot
      @NuclearTopSpot Před 28 dny +2

      @@thegreenxeno9430 Sigmafold Ohio Rizz edition

  • @azrael5648
    @azrael5648 Před 28 dny +117

    ChatGPT was fancy. Now this. This is revolutionary.

    • @DreckbobBratpfanne
      @DreckbobBratpfanne Před 28 dny +13

      It's gonna be massive once we can combine these, either a next gen chatGPT helping to create a next AlphaFold or direct chat to Protein 😂

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před 27 dny +4

      @@DreckbobBratpfanne
      "It's gonna be massive once we can combine these"
      Such AI -> AI bridges are already possible, and fine so long as you aren't bothered about communication latency vs a singukar multi modal AI.
      Tesla FSD was actually doing exactly that up to v11 I think, changing to a sort of multi modal approach for v12.

    • @magpielive
      @magpielive Před 27 dny +2

      Well its takes 12 to 15 years become undisputable like the journey of iPhone 1 to iPhone 15 .
      They are just started there main objective is to make AGI if agi come it revolutionise the humanity .

    • @dexio85
      @dexio85 Před 25 dny

      It's not. Just a few % over last technique. The guy is presenting it as if it's a second coming of JC. Probably because he partnered with Google on this. Google has sunk Billions into Deep Mind and the shareholders start to ask questions. They are trying to make their investment look good.

    • @eprd313
      @eprd313 Před 13 dny +1

      ​It's coming faster than you think. They call it the technological singularity

  • @Rajivrocks-Ltd.
    @Rajivrocks-Ltd. Před 28 dny +38

    Everyone is talking about LLMs, But this is really where impact to the future is being made!

    • @tingtonggamer4901
      @tingtonggamer4901 Před 24 dny

      This is made by an LLMs you know that right "Alphofold AI"

    • @tingtonggamer4901
      @tingtonggamer4901 Před 24 dny

      LLM*

    • @Rajivrocks-Ltd.
      @Rajivrocks-Ltd. Před 24 dny

      @@tingtonggamer4901no, I was correct

    • @Rajivrocks-Ltd.
      @Rajivrocks-Ltd. Před 24 dny +1

      @@tingtonggamer4901 Oh really? I haven't read the paper. Thanks for pointing it out, I'll check it out

    • @mark9294
      @mark9294 Před 23 dny +1

      LLMs are at the root of all these developments. Their emergence is an epochal event

  • @Sashik
    @Sashik Před 28 dny +105

    Oh I'm holding onto my papers now

  • @PranavPunuruFilms
    @PranavPunuruFilms Před 28 dny +49

    i'm pretty sure they're participating in CASP16 because of this. My lab is participating too. We just agreed that they've already won

  • @kaspernordlund6828
    @kaspernordlund6828 Před 28 dny +35

    I get shivers every time i work with alphafold! to think that it is free. A true testement to the Greatness of human civilisation!

    • @lucasreis6251
      @lucasreis6251 Před 28 dny +7

      Hey bud! While watching the video I had a question pop up, and seeing that you work in the field maybe you know the answer:
      From what I could understand, Alphafold is able to take "letters" as input (aminoacids or something like that I believe, but correct me if I'm wrong), and outputs the 3d shape of them right?
      If so, how does that helps with development of things like, the plastic eating enzyme, and other things? Wouldn't you already need to know which letters to use beforehand?
      How does knowing the shape of everything affects the development?
      Pardon me if I'm saying nonsense. I'm an automation engineer and know almost nothing about biology.

    • @jadynhasstupid2275
      @jadynhasstupid2275 Před 27 dny

      @@lucasreis6251you look slightly autistic

    • @bolatm22
      @bolatm22 Před 27 dny

      ​@@lucasreis6251 answer of ChatGPT:
      Yes, you understood correctly. AlphaFold takes a sequence of amino acids (these are the "letters" in proteins) as input and predicts their three-dimensional structure. This can help in the development of various biological processes, such as creating a plastic-eating enzyme or other enzymes. Knowing the three-dimensional structure of a protein can help scientists understand how it interacts with other molecules and what changes in its structure could improve its functionality. Thus, even if we know the amino acid sequence beforehand, predicting the three-dimensional structure aids in understanding its function and designing improved versions of the protein.

    • @kaspernordlund6828
      @kaspernordlund6828 Před 27 dny

      @@lucasreis6251 So yes you are abselutly correct, you would need to know the amino acids beforehand.
      That is luckily a pretty standard thing to get to know. You can do a buch of differnet test (like mass spec) to figure out what amino acids and in which order they are placed.
      The almost impossible part to figure out is how the protein folds. It has been a core theory that the the chemistry of the aminoacid chain is what makes proteins fold in specific ways and hold their shape and activity.
      But breaching the gap from sequence to folding is a huge task that until alphafold many times took years of research to figure out. What most people did to get as accurate readings as alpha fold was to do crystalografi. That is a very complicated task that needs pure crystals of your specific target protein, which was almost more art than science to make work honestly.
      Alpha fold skips this years of wait and hard labor, letting us play with how mutations affect folding in a timeframe of hours. It is hard to overstate the impact of this ability in research.
      Hope this answered your question ^-^
      edit: realized i didn't answer your question about how protein shape affects development.
      All proteins have basically the same amino acids in them. The amino acids are actually not what makes proteins able to interact in a biologically active manner. It is the shape of the protein that does. So to know how a protein interacts chemically you need to know how it folds, and not what amino-acids it has.

    • @nikolavideomaker
      @nikolavideomaker Před 26 dny

      ​​@@lucasreis6251 As a biochemist I can answer this. These "letters" are just a human code for amino acids, amino acids are molecules that form polymers (polymers are long-chain molecules that consist of a certain number of repeating connected units). In the case of amino acids, almost all organisms have 20 different of them, using these 20 every protein in your body is created. Proteins can do things such as move your body (muscles), but basically everything else in your cells is done by proteins. Signal transduction in neurons, breaking down nutrients and synthesizing new structures, transport of molecules around your cells, the immune system is also dependent on a lot of proteins (antibodies for example are proteins).
      Now, a type of proteins are enzymes, these are nature's catalysts, they can speed up reactions drastically (up to *10^9 !!!). For example we have enzymes that break down sugars into food. It gets interesting when you study bacteria, fungi, plants... Often times they have very specialized enzymes, for example some that can break down polymers. Plastics are polymers as well with often very similar chemical bonds to molecules that bacterial enzymes would break down. If we can mutate/adjust these enzymes to be more efficient at breaking down plastic, they could be a very useful catalyst in such a reaction. This is just one potential use, the possibilities are endless. We can have enzymes that produce lab-grown meat, help with electricity production...
      It's very easy to get the sequence of a protein (the amino acids it's comprised of), but how these proteins look structurally (3D) is very hard to find out by traditional methods. Using AI trained on existing 3D models, it can find patterns, for example a code of a certain 10 aminoacids would always fold into a certain structure. This is how predictions are made.
      So, now imagine you discovered a new enzyme from some bacteria that can do X, you get its sequence and instead of spending years and thousands of dollars in finding its structure in the lab, you can just plug the sequence into alphafold and get very likely the same result. Based on this then you can find out more about the protein's function, the mechanism of function and the sequence to structure relationship.
      I hope it was understandable what I wrote.

  • @larrychanhangpei9292
    @larrychanhangpei9292 Před 28 dny +41

    You made me love papers and start reading it. It means a lot to me and thank you for the excellent work as always!

  • @projectarduino2295
    @projectarduino2295 Před 28 dny +68

    If a protein can be manufactured to repair human dna, or to recover damaged telomeres, that would probably one of the most impactful biomedical results of all time. To help the elderly regain their strength to live healthier and longer lives by reducing cellular damage and cancer risks would be profound.
    I recently lost my grandfather because of age related weakening and loss of autonomy. If something like an enzyme injection could have kept him more autonomous by keeping his fatiguing body healthier, he might even have been alive today.
    I lost all my other grandparents to cancer, so if dna repair could help inhibit cancer development from mutation, it would be amazing to see no one ever have to go through what I have gone through again.

    • @js_es209
      @js_es209 Před 27 dny

      Death is inevitable and so is the timing of it. Will take u time to understand..

    • @antongazizov8473
      @antongazizov8473 Před 27 dny

      any sources?@@js_es209

    •  Před 27 dny +26

      ​@js_es209 Death may just become a probability that can be mostly mitigate. One day you'll understand.

    • @Gelatinocyte2
      @Gelatinocyte2 Před 26 dny +1

      Our cells already contain proteins that repair damaged DNA. The reason we're even dealing with cancer nowadays is because we live long enough for one to eventually develop in our body, and our own repair systems can't keep up with the rising amount of damage we are now sustaining: carcinogens in the air and in our food, irregular lifestyles, and overexposure to substances and radiations that humanity had otherwise not have access to prior to technological advancement. Without those three conditions, our body's own proteins is probably more than good enough to protect us from cancer, although growing older still means increasing likelihood of developing cancer (because that's just the inevitably of aging).

    • @valberm
      @valberm Před 26 dny +6

      ​​​@@js_es209 not really. There are ways, at least in theory, to become what they call biologically immortal. So, while your assertion may still be true on this day and age, maybe in the future it won't. Ok, probably real eternal life won't be achieved or even desired, but, periods of time which we consider to be long enough might be in the future.

  • @cureadvocate1
    @cureadvocate1 Před 28 dny +47

    Seeing AlphaFold 3 design ligands to help the brain and spinal cord regenerate would be cool, as myelin (and a few other tricks) inhibit neural regeneration
    Another interesting use case: exploring SIRT6 variations, its impact on aging, and finding ways to enhance its functionality.

    • @alphaomega154
      @alphaomega154 Před 28 dny +4

      it WILL HAPPEN.

    • @shezcmayo
      @shezcmayo Před 27 dny +4

      Finding effective remyelination therapies to help people with MS like my daughter.

    • @krox477
      @krox477 Před 27 dny

      Are you talking about Lizard man

    • @dawiedekabouter5733
      @dawiedekabouter5733 Před 26 dny

      If that as a medicine can be programmed into a fruit or vegetable or maybe a group of fruit and vegetables eaten together that can be grown it would really be amazing. Also changing the snakes DNA so it can have hands and legs and fruit from a tree that can help women reduce the pain at child birth and robots that can do the hard labour in the sun whose hands cannot be pricked by thorns.

  • @EVILBUNNY28
    @EVILBUNNY28 Před 28 dny +11

    I can imagine a system that can sequence your personal genome and through tons of training be able to discern how exactly you’ll react to certain drugs and what dosage you need. It’s crazy to look back at how far Medicine has come in the last 20 years, it’s impossible to even begin to image the capabilities in another 20 years time.
    All advancements start somewhere, and releasing a paper is usually always the first step

    • @notsojharedtroll23
      @notsojharedtroll23 Před 27 dny

      That's is a very cool concept 🎉🎉🎉

    • @scoutbane1651
      @scoutbane1651 Před 26 dny +1

      You just re-invented the field of pharmacogenomics, congrats.
      I can literally go do said test right now. It's just currently in its baby stages. I got offered to do said test for 500€ by my psychiatrist, with said disclaimer. The tech will only keep getting better though and once your genome is sequenced, they can just update the treatment with any new way to analyse it.

    • @alexandregaultier8313
      @alexandregaultier8313 Před 24 dny

      Do you have any need in mind ?

  • @lacklvster4512
    @lacklvster4512 Před 28 dny +19

    im so glad that i was born at JUST the right time to enter college for biotech in the infancy of all these new programs. cant wait to actually work with them later in life

    • @vectoralphaAI
      @vectoralphaAI Před 28 dny +2

      Yeah AI will revolutionize Biotechnology forever.

    • @CloudCoderChap
      @CloudCoderChap Před 28 dny +3

      You’re our future and I wish you luck.

    • @bluesmanshoes
      @bluesmanshoes Před 28 dny +1

      I recommend working with them now already!;)

    • @haianabou-karam4430
      @haianabou-karam4430 Před 26 dny +1

      Hary! AI will work alone when you finish the university! SUPERINTILIGANCE

  • @johanlarsson9805
    @johanlarsson9805 Před 27 dny +5

    Wow, DeepMind almost listened! I've told them since releasing AlphaFold that what is needed is a neural net that predicts the structure of a hypothetical ligand for some selected area of the protein. Meaning, you give it sequence A and it calculates structure B. You would then highlight an area on B that you want to bind to (like the reactive site of an enzyme) and it will then generate ligands that would fold in such a way that there would be geometric and chemical affinitiy with the highligted area.
    This isn't exactly as good as that, but atleast we are getting the joint structures, which is an improvement.
    Anyone with connections to DeepMind, please share my feedback with them, seems they have not seen the comments/emails during these five years.

  • @spambird68
    @spambird68 Před 28 dny +15

    Amazing work again from DeepMind!
    As a protein researcher, I'd love to see custom enzymes designed to bind PFAS, or the 'forever' chemicals that interrupt biological processes. Designing an active site to break them down chemically would be next level, but difficult due to the chemistry involved. However, there are other pesky environmental toxics listed as the Stockholm Convention Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), that may be more attainable. AI to design enzymes to breakdown environmental toxic chemicals? Sign me up! I'm in.

    • @JohnVance
      @JohnVance Před 27 dny +1

      I wanna dump truckloads of this on old landfills, come back in a few years and maybe it'll all be free compost...

    • @alexandregaultier8313
      @alexandregaultier8313 Před 24 dny

      @@JohnVance I guess that it won't work like this before some time.

  • @JoshTheWhale
    @JoshTheWhale Před 28 dny +26

    I fold my papers... Too good...
    ... and actually Imagine where we'll be just two more folds down the line!

    • @bvoros361
      @bvoros361 Před 28 dny +2

      41 more folds to reach the moon!

    • @postscriptum9856
      @postscriptum9856 Před 27 dny

      I thought it’s impossible to fold paper more than 5 or 6 times?

  • @WackyGameEngineer
    @WackyGameEngineer Před 28 dny +64

    I hope longevity medications coming soon for mum and dad :)

    • @goodfortunetoyou
      @goodfortunetoyou Před 28 dny +14

      100% agree, I think research on interventions to the aging process needs much more attention and funding.

    • @davidpereira9058
      @davidpereira9058 Před 28 dny +4

      Same, my dad is getting super old!

    • @nic.h
      @nic.h Před 28 dny +3

      Pretty sure that would come with a rather large can of worms.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Před 27 dny +1

      Nope.
      They will start on other animals first - likely significant life extension for domestic pets.

    • @GaryMillyz
      @GaryMillyz Před 27 dny +1

      @@mnomadvfx Nope- they will take human volunteers on their death bed.

  • @Rkcuddles
    @Rkcuddles Před 28 dny +2

    Absolutely love these longer videos. Can’t get enough of your enthusiasm and the paper news

  • @Oriell
    @Oriell Před 28 dny +14

    What a time to be alive! 🎉

    • @jamesmorrison4976
      @jamesmorrison4976 Před 24 dny

      Just company bullshit. Protein folding accuracy needs much more than only this program. They just sell nonsense!

  • @KnightsWithoutATable
    @KnightsWithoutATable Před 27 dny +6

    This is huge. There are so many illnesses that we know what the mechanism is right down to the proteins, but we just don't have any drugs for that are effective other than for treating the symptoms. This could also allow us to precisely target treatments to the illness much easier.

    • @cyborgar15
      @cyborgar15 Před 23 dny +1

      Curing people doesn't make money. Creating new illnesses makes money..Guess which one is coming your way..

  • @andynonomous8558
    @andynonomous8558 Před 27 dny +11

    Sigh, it's amazing how everything is about to 'change everything' and yet nothing ever seems to fundamentally change.

    • @samuelgibson780
      @samuelgibson780 Před 26 dny +6

      If you had a president take a space race approach to this technology you'd see a lot change. Something like "let's fundamentally eliminate biological failure as a cause of death within 10 years", and throw space race money at it, and you'd probably be able to pull it off. Would require a lot of planning though. Problem is that much more is *possible* than anyone has the authority or administrative capacity to implement, when it comes to all that sci fi stuff. Would require a society making a decision, which is a bigger barrier than the technology itself at this point.

    • @user-mp8fd8em3z
      @user-mp8fd8em3z Před 23 dny

      Our politicians do not work for the people. They work for corporations. That's why they're trying to be careful not to eliminate just worker jobs but also not make their industry or business obsolete in the future. They are going slow not only to be safe but to line their pockets with profit

    • @adissentingopinion848
      @adissentingopinion848 Před 21 dnem +2

      I mean, we said the same thing about the internet and the smartphone. Sure we have hype about eventual flops like NFTs, but you can't say something like email hasn't fundamentally changed the world in 30 years. And even stuff like enzymes are all in your detergents and your cosmetics. It doesn't change until it does, all at once.

    • @andynonomous8558
      @andynonomous8558 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@adissentingopinion848 Sure, but one just tires of the constant rhetoric that everything is always being revolutionised while day to day life is more of a struggle than ever. I think we just need to tone down the rhetoric a little.

    • @tachywubdub2469
      @tachywubdub2469 Před 20 dny

      It is also a game of patience. Lots of these are like designer custom made parts. You'd need to market it to scale it up enough for people to afford it, and that requires large initial funding... Which requires a Monetary incentive to do it.
      Basically, unless the enzymes break plastic into gold or companies/people(worst case) are taxed for plastic waste accumulated, there is no incentive to break down plastic until it is a dire threat

  • @AA-iq6ev
    @AA-iq6ev Před 27 dny +3

    And the Nobel prize goes to Alphafold!
    - in what?
    - yes

  • @vitmartobby5644
    @vitmartobby5644 Před 28 dny +3

    Holy paper! This is amazing! I imagine how this would work when newer advancements in agents and planning, as well as architecture advancements (such as Jamba proved) will affect this! Imagine how lab work will change with these new tech!

  • @mehakmittal
    @mehakmittal Před 27 dny +2

    This is incredible! I really hope all undergrad colleges could incorporate Alphafold-3 in their research so that the students of this generation can take advantage of this revolutionary technique!

  • @TehNetherlands
    @TehNetherlands Před 28 dny +8

    Folding on to my papers!

  • @anmol1713
    @anmol1713 Před 28 dny +4

    Very excited, I am working on a project where i used AF2 to predict better binding antibodies mixed with some reinforcement learning. I emailed everyone I know in university about the AlphaFold3, so excited.

    • @lucasreis6251
      @lucasreis6251 Před 28 dny +3

      Hey bud! While watching the video I had a question pop up, and seeing that you work in the field maybe you know the answer:
      From what I could understand, Alphafold is able to take "letters" as input (aminoacids or something like that I believe, but correct me if I'm wrong), and outputs the 3d shape of them right?
      If so, how does that helps with development of things like, the plastic eating enzyme, and other things? Wouldn't you already need to know which letters to use beforehand?
      How does knowing the shape of everything affects the development?
      Pardon me if I'm saying nonsense. I'm an automation engineer and know almost nothing about biology.

    • @user-nl4el8fc8q
      @user-nl4el8fc8q Před 27 dny +1

      @@lucasreis6251you are right,but same ‘letters’ can consist different shape and this shape detect different fraction.

    • @gumanelson2007
      @gumanelson2007 Před 26 dny

      ​@@lucasreis6251i have a rough idea but lets wait for him
      His must be better

  • @scottmiller2591
    @scottmiller2591 Před 26 dny +2

    Ligands for breaking cellulose out of wood for paper manufacturing that reduce smell and waste discharge.

  • @EaziGX
    @EaziGX Před 28 dny +5

    Meanwhile Apple has made a squeezable pencil

  • @sedthh
    @sedthh Před 28 dny +3

    all of life's molecules mapped

  • @PlaylistsOnly-ox5hp
    @PlaylistsOnly-ox5hp Před 28 dny +2

    I've already told you,
    but I'll tell you again:
    you are doing a lot to make tomorrow a better world,
    an enzyme to recycle plastic.
    The world lacks people like you.

  • @vincentpelletier1246
    @vincentpelletier1246 Před 28 dny +14

    I love how in a couple of years, all of this channel's content will definitely be done by AI.
    Even his voice sounds already auto generated already.
    What a time to be "alive" !

    • @leejerrett8268
      @leejerrett8268 Před 27 dny +9

      How dare you! Only a human is capable of sounding this stilted and unnatural! XD

    • @brexitgreens
      @brexitgreens Před 20 dny

      I want Dr Károly's voice in GPT-4o.

    • @brexitgreens
      @brexitgreens Před 20 dny

      I want Dr Károly's voice in GPT-4o.

  • @wlockuz4467
    @wlockuz4467 Před 26 dny +2

    I can't wait for the applications of these models to never make it to general use because of politics, or have them completely monopolized by big companies.

  • @FlySpleen
    @FlySpleen Před 28 dny +4

    "How could it possibly be better?!" As a protein scientist I can safely claim that AlphaFold2 was useless to me. Very happy to see the research charging forward in this field

    • @jan7356
      @jan7356 Před 25 dny

      This.

    • @jamesmorrison4976
      @jamesmorrison4976 Před 24 dny

      You should know (as a protein scientist) that those computer simulations are still not even close to predict accurate folding of a protein!

  • @David-ct
    @David-ct Před 28 dny +2

    Honestly I would like to see some annotations about the function of the differents parts of each protein structure. That would be so cool!

  • @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    Got my hello world on the AlphaFold 3 server!! Thank you for this video Two Minute Papers! WHAT A TIME TO BE ALIVE!

  • @SteveRowe
    @SteveRowe Před 28 dny +5

    I'd like to see an enzyme that could break down interstitial amyloid plaques to prevent or slow the progress of Alzheimer's.

    • @4grammaton
      @4grammaton Před 27 dny +2

      Amyloid plaques appear to be a symptom of AD, not a cause. They seem to be a kind of defensive or homeostatic mechanism in response to insufficient nutrition in brain cells, with the function of downsizing brain volume to keep more important areas of the brain well-supplied. Treatments which reduce or prevent amyloid plaques have shown to be ineffective, and in fact counterproductive, in halting or reversing the progression of the disease. Tau protein tangles and buildup of protein in cerebrospinal fluid during the prodrome of the disease seem to be more material to the pathogenesis.

    • @SteveRowe
      @SteveRowe Před 27 dny

      @@4grammaton Interesting. I read (5+ years ago now) that the plaques naturally build up and eventually encroach on synapses. I will refresh my knowledge.

    • @4grammaton
      @4grammaton Před 27 dny

      @@SteveRowe Please do, and feel free to inform me if what I said is inaccurate. I also remember reading that plaques are found even in the brains of young children.

  • @SOTPOD
    @SOTPOD Před 27 dny +1

    what a time to be alive! thank you so much!

  • @bloodbound696
    @bloodbound696 Před 27 dny +1

    I LITERALLY Made a 5-page paper.. on mealworms specifically superworms that broke down plastics and got calories from them and were able to reproduce from the plastic diet thanks to their enzymes. Finally, this is getting attention, making those enzymes into like an artificial stomach to at least turn plastics into Glycol is better than nothing!

  • @Sonny_McMacsson
    @Sonny_McMacsson Před 28 dny +2

    "Letters go in and a 3-D structure comes out. You can't explain that."

  • @StandardName562
    @StandardName562 Před 27 dny

    I have been using AlphaFold 2 for my thesis and it helped me so much understanding the protein I was researching. I am so hyped for this ❤

  • @Ikkarson
    @Ikkarson Před 27 dny +3

    Will these systems be leveraged as commons for the better of mankind, or foreclosed by a bunch of heirs atop predatory funds? I am positively happy that such progress is made, and ever so pessimistic about who will reap the benefits.

  • @perplexedon9834
    @perplexedon9834 Před 28 dny +2

    Dude! I'm actually flipping out at this bar chart!

  • @sobbski2672
    @sobbski2672 Před 26 dny +1

    Best part of this was them supplying all the pseudo code and training datasets. Hopefully Rosetta Commons will drop an open source version soon

  • @spinninglink
    @spinninglink Před 27 dny +2

    HOLY mother of Fpapers!

  • @mattbrandon9157
    @mattbrandon9157 Před 28 dny +5

    had to mute the voice and turn on cc but in the end it didn't matter cause i really didn't see the big deal . guess i'm not well informed about this whole protein folding science.

    • @jamesmorrison4976
      @jamesmorrison4976 Před 24 dny

      I think it is merely bs. Protein folding by computer is not precise enough - a lot of interactions (h-h bridges) are just crudely approximated and you still would need a super computer as a neural network even bigger as every element of the universe to make it fold like in real time. The most precise models are when you combine protein x-ray crystallography with protein folding programs.

  • @XiangWeiHuang
    @XiangWeiHuang Před 28 dny +15

    can it help to make cat girls

    • @JohnSmith762A11B
      @JohnSmith762A11B Před 28 dny +3

      The highest of all high technologies; the final technology man will ever invent (because he can't be bothered with anything else after that).

    • @yakirfrankoveig8094
      @yakirfrankoveig8094 Před 28 dny

      It can make all the proteins but i dont think it can use them to build your cat girl

  • @vitalyl1327
    @vitalyl1327 Před 25 dny +2

    The very fact that AlphaFold even works is huge - it means that behind the insanely complex Van-der-Waals physics of millions atoms interacting, there is some really good analytical approximation hidden with a tiny computational cost. If machine learning could uncover such a system, there is a good chance that we'll eventually discover it analytically, and this will be the real game changer.

  • @snailedlt
    @snailedlt Před 28 dny +2

    What a time to be alive!

  • @debayondharchowdhury3001
    @debayondharchowdhury3001 Před 27 dny +1

    Holy Mother of all Papers...

  • @pavguy
    @pavguy Před 27 dny +1

    Have been following Deepmind since Alpha Go days...and am really inspired by their AI for Good approach. Thanks for sharing it. Do consider doing a AMA online sometime for all of us. Cheers

  • @__SKYNET__
    @__SKYNET__ Před 28 dny

    Fantastic paper, thank you

  • @danypell2517
    @danypell2517 Před 26 dny +1

    this is crazy exciting for the next update damn

  • @academicalisthenics
    @academicalisthenics Před 28 dny +3

    I love our human ingenuity! ♥️

  • @ShanilPanara
    @ShanilPanara Před 28 dny +2

    Absolutely huge!

  • @smellthel
    @smellthel Před 27 dny +1

    This is one of the coolest things I've heard of in my life.

  • @goodtothinkwith
    @goodtothinkwith Před 28 dny +5

    For the non-biologists here (myself included), how close does this get us to designing more specifically targeted drugs without undesirable side-effects?

    • @andreavitale2845
      @andreavitale2845 Před 28 dny +1

      A friend of mine is curious to know, too.

    • @jamesmorrison4976
      @jamesmorrison4976 Před 24 dny +1

      In a nutshell: To predict correct protein folding is absolutely insane. In reality: You need actually to concentrate the real protein and use x-ray crystallography and a simulation like this to get a quite precise glimpse how it fold. I think this advertising for this program just ignores that. A solely simulation can’t predict folding of a protein (not even close). Peptides (very short proteins) are eventually possible so take this advertising with a grain of salt. Yes it will fold your proteins and give you some insights but no real scientist would put their hand into fire that he/she trusts a program like this.

  • @test-uy4vc
    @test-uy4vc Před 28 dny +10

    What a protein time to be folded alive! 🎉

  • @acpatel9491
    @acpatel9491 Před 10 dny

    Nice information..! Thanks for the video. I am an old dude, but still love to see the progress.

  • @derasor
    @derasor Před 27 dny

    Definitely looking forward for other molecules, along with their interactions (the dynamism you referred to) is imo the most exciting possibility. The fact that this may be doable in the next few years, given these truly amazing developments, is just totally mindblowing.

  • @SevAbante
    @SevAbante Před 27 dny +2

    Alpafold: we made something that will change the world
    Government: 🔫

  • @OperationDarkside
    @OperationDarkside Před 28 dny +2

    What a time to fold proteins!

  • @andyc8707
    @andyc8707 Před 27 dny +2

    Having choose to Fold@home in the early 00s rather than mine bitcoin, I am glad to see this field has grown so much.

  • @MaybeTogether
    @MaybeTogether Před 23 dny +1

    This kind of progress may be more important than all those other AIs. Medicine > Other stuff

  • @aidenaune7008
    @aidenaune7008 Před 16 dny +1

    we are on the verge of custom gene editing at home, creating our very own new species, forming single cellular life to perform tasks, and even optimizing the genetics of our own children.

  • @nothing_is_real_0000
    @nothing_is_real_0000 Před 27 dny +1

    What a time to be ALIVE!!!!

  • @sebby007
    @sebby007 Před 27 dny

    Thank you for your work!

  • @coloryvr
    @coloryvr Před 28 dny +1

    This seems to be great! WOW!

  • @redstrat1234
    @redstrat1234 Před 27 dny +2

    I have been keeping up with developments in AI for the last couple of years, and have lost count of the new developments that will 'change everything'.
    I look out the window and nothing's changed, I go to my place of work, nothing has changed, I watch TV and sports, same thing, no change. Nothing has changed in 2 years apart from some online AI programs that'll give you pictures, videos, music, essays from a prompt, it's fine and all, but it hasn't 'changed everything'
    It's like crying wolf every 5 minutes, the 'changes everything' hype just becomes white noise.

    • @Johnithinuioian
      @Johnithinuioian Před 26 dny

      The only thing that's really changing is the increasing level of fakeness.

    • @Broken_Mesh
      @Broken_Mesh Před 26 dny

      It feels like where in the bubble phase of this technology where people see potential everywhere but there is no actual use, so there’s a race to find it. It reminds a lot of the dotnet bubble. People claimed the Internet would change everything for years and only after the bubble popped and a small number of products survived did change start to happen. Well and now its hard to find a place in everyday life where the internet didn’t change something.

  • @ajaykumar-ve5oq
    @ajaykumar-ve5oq Před 28 dny +1

    great progress lets see if it can bring back hairs

  • @FredMboyoSongu
    @FredMboyoSongu Před 27 dny

    Amazing! What a time to be alive! 🧬

  • @nicolaslima3724
    @nicolaslima3724 Před 28 dny +1

    this arrived way earlier than i imagined :0

  • @E2_1B
    @E2_1B Před 21 dnem

    Thankyou for sharing!

  • @nickrobinson7096
    @nickrobinson7096 Před 26 dny

    I was in my final year or biochemistry in 2018 and we were discussing the protein folding problem where the lecturer said estimates for solving it are around 25 years aways. Next year alphafold went mainstream.

  • @DreckbobBratpfanne
    @DreckbobBratpfanne Před 28 dny +1

    These papers give so much optimistic hope for the not so distant future 😁

  • @aleipiano
    @aleipiano Před 4 dny

    This is beautiful!!!

  • @robertoaguirrematurana6419

    Just a few more papers down the line and it'll figure out abiogenesis, what a time to be alive!

  • @valentinmitterbauer4196
    @valentinmitterbauer4196 Před 28 dny +7

    Finally, i can efficiently engineer more deadly prions to sell to the highest bidder

    • @htopherollem649
      @htopherollem649 Před 27 dny +1

      you can have mine, but you must take all of them (CTE sufferer)lol

  • @viniciusmoura9105
    @viniciusmoura9105 Před 22 dny

    In 2004 I was ingressing University to course Biological Sciences. If you asked anyone there how much time they'd think it would take for mankind to see an applicable tool with the capabilities and accuracy of Alphafold you wouldn't hear "20 years" even from the most optimistic.

  • @aperson2730
    @aperson2730 Před 16 dny

    Thanks for the info 👍🙂

  • @travellingsarek3982
    @travellingsarek3982 Před 16 dny

    I love your podcasts even thought I cannot understand much. ❤

  • @markus_park
    @markus_park Před 28 dny

    Amazing!

  • @marcosfuentes980
    @marcosfuentes980 Před 28 dny +1

    I would love to see it use to create a nootropic, some thing like the NZT-48 of limitless

  • @adityarao2134
    @adityarao2134 Před 28 dny +6

    Amazing!
    Can someone shed light on why these ml models work better than the ones more rooted in physics? To me it seems like this should be a first principles based problem considering the causal non-entropic physicality of it. For example, we similarly have calculators to do math since the rigid rules are part of the ground truth (E.g. transformer based LLM models predicting the next token are worse at adding numbers than a calculator).

    • @jdirksen
      @jdirksen Před 28 dny

      I ain't a guy that does much personal work with AI, but from what I gather it's mainly because this AI model can "intuit" to approximations and skip over many steps, then go back and verify it, and adjust its answer until it's as close as it can get. rather than having to work through the calculations done for a physics based interaction with many points of failure that can cause a cascade of inaccuracies to develop due to small errors and the like.
      Again, take it with a grain of salt, that's just my best guess

    • @ThisMoth
      @ThisMoth Před 28 dny +2

      I'm flattered on behalf of humanity that you decided to interact with humans before consulting with an AI,
      My human reply would be that I guess the physics based algorithms are based on physics as we understand them and are more limited as they're only as good as we understand physics. A full general AI can take inspiration from any element in the world that would boost the chance of success. So less precise because it's not rooted in physics yet more precise because of the insane amount of datapoints as inspiration.
      Chatgpt 3.5
      Machine learning models like AlphaFold 3 outperform physics-based approaches in protein folding due to their ability to learn complex patterns from vast amounts of data. While physics-based methods rely on rigid rules and principles, they often struggle with the inherent complexity of biological systems. ML models, on the other hand, can capture subtle relationships and nuances in the data, leading to more accurate predictions. However, it's essential to note that both approaches have their strengths and weaknesses, and a hybrid approach combining the best of both worlds may yield even better results in the future.
      PS, this is just me trying to come up with an answer to your question because it was a good question and I'm curious.

    • @Sycamore_flaw
      @Sycamore_flaw Před 28 dny +2

      I'm definitely no expert but from my engineering experience when it comes to simulating complex processes with algorithms errors tend to stack quickly and so your result loses reliability the more iterations are ran. Artificial intelligence systems have the benefit of "knowing" roughly what the output result should be expected as, whilst an algorithm has to be tuned either by the operator or a separate algorithmic process (With much the same issues as before). The intelligence model is probably never going to be exactly accurate as it doesn't solve the problem as a series of fundamental physical rules of nature but instead through user defined rules. The physics model will probably never be exactly accurate because noise is inherent in the system. A weird analogy I think of is if the two systems are both set out to solve a jigsaw puzzle the intelligence algorithm takes premade data (That may not be neccesarily accurate) in the form of puzzle pieces and tries to make the picture as you and I would, but will always lose data in the gaps and overall accuracy. On the other hand the physics algorithm attempts to cut out its own pieces which can sometimes be effective but compounds errors as it goes. As I say tho, I am no expert, just having some fun with the ideas

    • @josmulder2667
      @josmulder2667 Před 27 dny +1

      We simply do no have the compute, because these calculations scale unfavorable. These new models seem to somehow compress the data. Its like the game of life, simple rules can create complexity

    • @leejerrett8268
      @leejerrett8268 Před 27 dny

      From what I understand it isn’t a problem of accuracy but of computing power. If an AI gets decent at learning the higher order ‘rules’ which govern protein folding it can look at a sequence of amino acids and give an educated guess on the shape it would likely take under certain conditions without having to calculate millions interactions between hundreds of thousands of physics objects.
      It makes it viable for a researcher to identify promising novel drug candidates within a search field of millions of possible amino acid sequences without needing to invest in thousands of years of supercomputing time or the obscene amount of lab time and resources that would be required in order to to test each novel substance in vitro.

  • @weishenmejames
    @weishenmejames Před 25 dny

    I "held on to my papers" and am impressed

  • @PS-vk6bn
    @PS-vk6bn Před 27 dny

    Awesome!

  • @egehosgungor2897
    @egehosgungor2897 Před 28 dny +2

    Holding my papers !

  • @MrSchweppes
    @MrSchweppes Před 27 dny

    Demis Hassabis and the AlphaFold team deserve a Noble Prize in medicine for this system!

  • @DJVARAO
    @DJVARAO Před 26 dny +1

    Drug discovery faces a significant hurdle with target validation. If AlphaFold 3 simplifies this, it could save billions and years of research typically wasted due to inadequate in silico validation. At our lab, we are testing a new quantum computing tool specifically for that purpose. It would be interesting to see how AlphaFold 3 performs on the same tasks.

  • @ingoos
    @ingoos Před 28 dny +2

    looks like the next Nobel prize awardee!!

  • @n0o0b090lv
    @n0o0b090lv Před 28 dny +2

    This is gone be wild

  • @vidal9747
    @vidal9747 Před 27 dny +1

    If I got 100 citations I would be happy. Imagine getting a couple thousand...

  • @marinomusico5768
    @marinomusico5768 Před 27 dny +1

    AMAZING ❤

  • @LJBuckers
    @LJBuckers Před 28 dny +2

    Amazing times.

  • @RoulDukeGonzo
    @RoulDukeGonzo Před 25 dny

    I'd like to repeat the seminal work of Chothia and Lesk, laying the groundwork for protein structure biophysics with a couple of dozen protein structures in the 1970s, re-applied to the vast universe of new protein structures. This would be a tribute to the late Cyrus Chothia, who saved my PhD (and probably my life).