ExplorerPharmaceutical ResearchBiochemistry
Research PaperResearchia:202603.18023

Training a force field for proteins and small molecules from scratch

Alexandre Blanco-González

Abstract

Force fields for molecular dynamics are usually developed manually, limiting their transferability and making systematic exploration of functional forms challenging. We developed a graph neural network that assigns all force field parameters for diverse molecules using continuous atom typing. The freely-available model, called Garnet, was trained on quantum mechanical, condensed phase and protein nuclear magnetic resonance data without the use of existing parameters. The resulting force field sh...

Submitted: March 18, 2026Subjects: Biochemistry; Pharmaceutical Research

Description / Details

Force fields for molecular dynamics are usually developed manually, limiting their transferability and making systematic exploration of functional forms challenging. We developed a graph neural network that assigns all force field parameters for diverse molecules using continuous atom typing. The freely-available model, called Garnet, was trained on quantum mechanical, condensed phase and protein nuclear magnetic resonance data without the use of existing parameters. The resulting force field shows comparable performance to current force fields on small molecules, folded proteins, protein complexes and disordered proteins. It shows similar results to popular approaches for relative binding free energy predictions across a range of targets. Assessing different functional forms shows that the double exponential potential is a flexible and accurate alternative to the Lennard-Jones potential. Garnet provides a platform for automated, reproducible force field discovery that brings the benefits of machine learning to classical force fields.


Source: arXiv:2603.16770v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16770v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2603.16770v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16770v1

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Submission Info
Date:
Mar 18, 2026
Topic:
Pharmaceutical Research
Area:
Biochemistry
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