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Axel Levy

Axel Levy contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Modeling Atomic Conformational Ensembles of Proteins via Test-Time Supervision of Boltz-2 on Cryo-EM Density Maps

Knowledge of a protein's atomic conformational ensemble is critical to determining its function, yet state-of-the-art ensemble prediction models are limited by lack of high-quality conformational data from simulation or experiment. Recent advances in heterogeneous reconstruction for cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) have enabled scientists to visualize ensembles of density maps for larger proteins and complexes not typically accessible through simulation, but building atomic models into these maps remains a challenge. Traditionally, ensemble prediction models are trained via a two-stage process: experimental density maps are converted into atomic structural ensembles through model building, after which these structures are used to train sequence-to-atomic ensemble predictors. In this work, we propose a new principle for fine-tuning pre-trained static structure prediction models such as Boltz-2 directly on raw cryo-EM maps, bypassing the two-stage process. We apply this technique to the problem of atomic model building by fine-tuning Boltz-2 to generate atomic conformations from an input ensemble of cryo-EM maps, achieving superior model building accuracy compared to prior work. Beyond overfitting to individual map ensembles, our method, CryoSampler, also shows preliminary evidence of in-domain generalization after fine-tuning, sampling diverse atomic conformations for an unseen sequences within the same protein family without requiring cryo-EM data. These capabilities indicate that CryoSampler holds the potential to train next-generation atomic ensemble prediction models directly on raw cryo-EM measurements.

preprint2022arXiv

CryoAI: Amortized Inference of Poses for Ab Initio Reconstruction of 3D Molecular Volumes from Real Cryo-EM Images

Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has become a tool of fundamental importance in structural biology, helping us understand the basic building blocks of life. The algorithmic challenge of cryo-EM is to jointly estimate the unknown 3D poses and the 3D electron scattering potential of a biomolecule from millions of extremely noisy 2D images. Existing reconstruction algorithms, however, cannot easily keep pace with the rapidly growing size of cryo-EM datasets due to their high computational and memory cost. We introduce cryoAI, an ab initio reconstruction algorithm for homogeneous conformations that uses direct gradient-based optimization of particle poses and the electron scattering potential from single-particle cryo-EM data. CryoAI combines a learned encoder that predicts the poses of each particle image with a physics-based decoder to aggregate each particle image into an implicit representation of the scattering potential volume. This volume is stored in the Fourier domain for computational efficiency and leverages a modern coordinate network architecture for memory efficiency. Combined with a symmetrized loss function, this framework achieves results of a quality on par with state-of-the-art cryo-EM solvers for both simulated and experimental data, one order of magnitude faster for large datasets and with significantly lower memory requirements than existing methods.

preprint2022arXiv

Deep Generative Modeling for Volume Reconstruction in Cryo-Electron Microscopy

Recent breakthroughs in high-resolution imaging of biomolecules in solution with cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) have unlocked new doors for the reconstruction of molecular volumes, thereby promising further advances in biology, chemistry, and pharmacological research. Recent next-generation volume reconstruction algorithms that combine generative modeling with end-to-end unsupervised deep learning techniques have shown promising preliminary results, but still face considerable technical and theoretical hurdles when applied to experimental cryo-EM images. In light of the proliferation of such methods, we propose here a critical review of recent advances in the field of deep generative modeling for cryo-EM volume reconstruction. The present review aims to (i) unify and compare these new methods using a consistent statistical framework, (ii) present them using a terminology familiar to machine learning researchers and computational biologists with no specific background in cryo-EM, and (iii) provide the necessary perspective on current advances to highlight their relative strengths and weaknesses, along with outstanding bottlenecks and avenues for improvements in the field. This review might also raise the interest of computer vision practitioners, as it highlights significant limits of deep generative models in low signal-to-noise regimes -- therefore emphasizing a need for new theoretical and methodological developments.