Atoms as Language: VQ-Atom: Semantic Discretization for Molecular Representation Learning
Abstract
Molecular representation learning has become a central approach in AI-driven drug discovery, yet existing molecular tokenizations such as SMILES remain largely syntactic and do not naturally align with chemically meaningful substructures. In this work, we introduce VQ-Atom, a semantic discretization framework that converts continuous atom-level graph representations into discrete tokens corresponding to local chemical environments. Using graph neural network embeddings and vector quantization, a...
Description / Details
Molecular representation learning has become a central approach in AI-driven drug discovery, yet existing molecular tokenizations such as SMILES remain largely syntactic and do not naturally align with chemically meaningful substructures. In this work, we introduce VQ-Atom, a semantic discretization framework that converts continuous atom-level graph representations into discrete tokens corresponding to local chemical environments. Using graph neural network embeddings and vector quantization, atoms are assigned to codebook entries representing chemically meaningful atomic contexts. These discrete tokens define a molecular language suitable for Transformer-based pretraining. We evaluate VQ-Atom in protein-ligand interaction prediction under a protein-cold split setting without relying on 3D structural information. Experimental results show that VQ-Atom consistently improves predictive performance compared to conventional tokenization approaches, suggesting that semantically grounded discretization can substantially enhance molecular representation learning. Our findings indicate that token design itself plays a critical role in enabling effective language modeling for chemistry.
Source: arXiv:2605.16823v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.16823v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.16823v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.16823v1
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May 19, 2026
AI in Drug Discovery
AI
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