Researcher profile

Nabin Giri

Nabin Giri contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Yeti: A compact protein structure tokenizer for reconstruction and multi-modal generation

Multimodal models that jointly reason over protein sequences, structures, and function annotations within a unified representation hold immense potential for integrating multimodal data and generating new proteins with designed functional properties. To utilize transformer architectures, such models require a tokenizer that converts protein structure from continuous atomic coordinates into discrete representations suitable for scalable multimodal training. The quality of such models are fundamentally upper bounded by the fidelity and expressiveness of the underlying tokenized structure. However, existing tokenizers prioritize reconstruction over generative abilities. To address these gaps, we introduce Yeti, a simple and compact protein structure tokenizer based on lookup free quantization and trained end to end with a flow matching objective for multimodal learning. Compared to existing models, Yeti generally achieves the best codebook utilization and token diversity, and second best reconstruction accuracy (with 10x fewer parameters than ESM3) on diverse datasets. To validate Yeti's generative capability, we trained a compact multimodal model jointly over its structure tokens and amino acid sequence entirely from scratch, with no pretrained initialization. The resulting multimodal model generates plausible structures under unconditional cogeneration of protein sequence and structures, achieving comparable results to 10x larger models. Together, these results demonstrate that Yeti is a compact and expressive protein structure tokenizer suitable for training multimodal models that cogenerates highly plausible sequences and structures.

preprint2022arXiv

DRLComplex: Reconstruction of protein quaternary structures using deep reinforcement learning

Predicted inter-chain residue-residue contacts can be used to build the quaternary structure of protein complexes from scratch. However, only a small number of methods have been developed to reconstruct protein quaternary structures using predicted inter-chain contacts. Here, we present an agent-based self-learning method based on deep reinforcement learning (DRLComplex) to build protein complex structures using inter-chain contacts as distance constraints. We rigorously tested DRLComplex on two standard datasets of homodimeric and heterodimeric protein complexes (i.e., the CASP-CAPRI homodimer and Std_32 heterodimer datasets) using both true and predicted interchain contacts as inputs. Utilizing true contacts as input, DRLComplex achieved high average TM-scores of 0.9895 and 0.9881 and a low average interface RMSD (I_RMSD) of 0.2197 and 0.92 on the two datasets, respectively. When predicted contacts are used, the method achieves TM-scores of 0.73 and 0.76 for homodimers and heterodimers, respectively. Our experiments find that the accuracy of reconstructed quaternary structures depends on the accuracy of the contact predictions. Compared to other optimization methods for reconstructing quaternary structures from inter-chain contacts, DRLComplex performs similar to an advanced gradient descent method and better than a Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulation method and a simulated annealing-based method, validating the effectiveness of DRLComplex for quaternary reconstruction of protein complexes.