On the Reliability of AI Methods in Drug Discovery: Evaluation of Boltz-2 for Structure and Binding Affinity Prediction
Abstract
Despite continuing hype about the role of AI in drug discovery, no "AI-discovered drugs" have so far received regulatory approval. Here we assess one of the latest AI based tools in this domain. The ability to rapidly predict protein-ligand structures and binding affinities is pivotal for accelerating drug discovery. Boltz-2, a recently developed biomolecular foundation model, aims to bridge the gap between AI efficiency and physics-based precision through a joint "co-folding" approach. In this study, we provide an extensive evaluation of Boltz-2 using two large-scale datasets: 16,780 compounds for 3CLPro and 21,702 compounds for TNKS2. We compare Boltz-2 predicted structures with traditional docking and binding affinities with binding free energies derived from the physics-based ESMACS protocol. Structural analysis reveals significant global RMSD variations, indicating that Boltz-2 predicts multiple protein conformations and ligand binding positions rather than a single converged pose. Energetic evaluations exhibit only weak to moderate correlations across the global datasets. Furthermore, a focused analysis of the top 100 compounds yields no significant correlation between the Boltz-2 predictions and the binding free energies from fine-grained ESMACS, alongside observed saturation difference in ligand structures. Our results show that while Boltz-2 offers substantial speed for initial screening, it lacks the energetic resolution required for lead identification. These findings highlight the necessity of employing physics-based methods for the reliability and refinement of AI-derived models.
Source: arXiv:2603.05532v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05532v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2603.05532v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05532v1