Geometric deep learning assists protein engineering. Opportunities and Challenges
- 1Universidad de Chile
- 2
- 3Leibniz Institut fur Pflanzenbiochemie
Journal
Biotechnology Advances
ISSN
0734-9750
1873-1899
Open Access
closed
Volume
87
Protein engineering is experiencing a paradigmatic transformation through the integration of geometric deep learning (GDL) into computational design workflows. While traditional approaches such as rational design and directed evolution have achieved significant progress, they remain constrained by the vastness of sequence space and the cost of experimental validation. GDL overcomes these limitations by operating on non-Euclidean domains and by capturing the spatial, topological, and physicochemical features that govern protein function. This perspective provides a comprehensive and critical overview of GDL applications in stability prediction, functional annotation, molecular interaction modeling, and de novo protein design. It consolidates methodological principles, architectural diversity, and performance trends across representative studies, emphasizing how GDL enhances interpretability and generalization in protein science. Aimed at both computational method developers and experimental protein engineers, the review bridges algorithmic concepts with practical design considerations, offering guidance on data representation, model selection, and evaluation strategies. By integrating explainable artificial intelligence and structure-based validation within a unified conceptual framework, this work highlights how GDL can serve as a foundation for transparent, interpretable, and autonomous protein design. As GDL converges with generative modeling, molecular simulation, and high-throughput experimentation, it is poised to become a cornerstone technology for next-generation protein engineering and synthetic biology.