Breaking 12:50 Hormuz shipping paralysis blocks a third of global fertilizer trade as food crisis deepens 12:40 Xbox's new CEO personally ended the "This is an Xbox" campaign to rebuild brand identity 12:20 Thailand secures deal with Iran for safe tanker passage through the Strait of Hormuz 12:10 IEA chief says Iran war energy crisis surpasses the oil shocks of the 1970s 11:40 JPMorgan says Bitcoin has outperformed gold as a safe haven during the Iran war 11:30 TikTok pulls "Fruit Love Island" after AI fruit drama series hits 300 million views in 10 days 11:00 Moroccan dirham strengthens against the us dollar amid stable financial conditions 10:45 Kirsten Dunst joins Sydney Sweeney in the sequel to The Housemaid’s Secret 10:27 Microsoft posts worst quarterly drop since 2008 as Big Tech AI spending alarms investors 10:20 Asian airlines slash flights from April as jet‑fuel crisis bites 10:13 US-made landmines found near Shiraz kill civilians in first confirmed deployment in decades 10:04 Polish PM Tusk warns of imminent escalation in Iran war as conflict nears one month 10:00 EU trade commissioner discusses critical minerals and tariffs with US counterpart 10:00 Sony halts memory card orders as global chip shortage squeezes consumer electronics 09:50 JPMorgan adopte une position haussière sur le dollar pour la première fois depuis un an 09:49 Drones strike Kuwait airport again, causing major damage to radar system 09:30 United States migrant hubs: Cambodian migrant repatriated after transfer to Eswatini 09:29 Bank of America agrees to pay 72.5 million dollars to settle Epstein lawsuit 09:00 United States: police thwart attack plot targeting pro-Palestinian activist 08:20 Micron shares drop over 20% in six days after Google unveils TurboQuant 07:50 Markets weeks from peak panic amid US-Iran conflict, warns Alpine Macro 07:34 India approves purchase of new air defense missiles from Russia 07:14 United States eases restrictions to boost investment in Venezuelan minerals

Artificial intelligence tools accelerate drug and protein research breakthroughs

Wednesday 11 - 07:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Artificial intelligence tools accelerate drug and protein research breakthroughs

A new generation of artificial intelligence tools is transforming biomedical research, enabling scientists to analyze genetic regulation, decode protein structures, and design drug compounds in a fraction of the time previously required. Recent studies show that machine learning systems can compress months or even years of laboratory work into days.

One recent study published in Nature introduced a machine learning system capable of analyzing tens of thousands of chemical structures to predict how molecules will assemble during drug synthesis. Developed by researchers from the University of Utah and the University of California, Los Angeles, the system reduces the lengthy process of optimizing chemical reactions, which often takes months of experimentation.

The tool addresses a major challenge in applying artificial intelligence to chemistry. AI models typically require massive datasets, but producing high quality experimental chemistry data is expensive and time consuming. According to Matthew Sigman, a chemist at the University of Utah, the system allows researchers to work with smaller datasets while still generating reliable predictions. The model can also transfer its predictions to chemical reactions it has not previously encountered.

In related work, researchers at Yale University collaborating with pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim created an AI platform called MOSAIC. Reported by Nature in January, the platform identified more than 35 new compounds, including pharmaceutical and cosmetic ingredients, achieving a success rate of about 71 percent.

Artificial intelligence is also improving the study of protein structures. On March 10, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory announced a program called AQuaRef, described in Nature Communications, that combines quantum computing techniques with AI to determine protein structures more accurately while reducing computational costs.

Tests on 71 protein structures showed improved performance compared with existing methods. The system was also able to correctly determine proton positions in DJ-1, a human protein linked to certain forms of Parkinson’s disease that has been difficult to map using conventional techniques.

Researchers at the National University of Singapore separately reported progress with their AI system D-I-TASSER, which predicts complex protein structures with about 13 percent greater accuracy than previous leading methods.

Advances are also emerging in the study of gene regulation. Scientists at the Joint BioEnergy Institute of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory developed a high throughput platform that can test thousands of plant genetic switches in a single experiment. These DNA sequences control when genes are activated or silenced, and identifying them has been a major bottleneck in plant synthetic biology.

While CRISPR technology allows precise gene editing, identifying the regulatory elements to modify has remained slow. The new platform aims to accelerate that process.

Meanwhile, researchers at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard created an AI framework that automatically identifies shared cellular information across multiple measurement types. The approach gives scientists a more integrated view of cellular states involved in diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, and metabolic disorders.

These developments arrive as AI designed drugs move toward late stage clinical testing. According to Drug Target Review, 2026 could become a decisive year for AI driven drug discovery as several treatments identified using artificial intelligence enter critical phase III clinical trials.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.