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Rianne van den Berg

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

ORCID: 0000-0001-5076-2802

Publishes on Metallic Glasses and Amorphous Alloys, Generative Adversarial Networks and Image Synthesis, Theoretical and Computational Physics. 77 papers and 7.6k citations.

77Publications
7.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Graph Convolutional Matrix Completion
Rianne van den Berg, Thomas Kipf, Max Welling|arXiv (Cornell University)|2017
Cited by 1.1kOpen Access

We consider matrix completion for recommender systems from the point of view of link prediction on graphs. Interaction data such as movie ratings can be represented by a bipartite user-item graph with labeled edges denoting observed ratings. Building on recent progress in deep learning on graph-structured data, we propose a graph auto-encoder framework based on differentiable message passing on the bipartite interaction graph. Our model shows competitive performance on standard collaborative filtering benchmarks. In settings where complimentary feature information or structured data such as a social network is available, our framework outperforms recent state-of-the-art methods.

Protein generation with evolutionary diffusion: sequence is all you need
Sarah Alamdari, Nitya Thakkar, Rianne van den Berg et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2023
Cited by 149Open Access

Abstract Deep generative models are increasingly powerful tools for the in silico design of novel proteins. Recently, a family of generative models called diffusion models has demonstrated the ability to generate biologically plausible proteins that are dissimilar to any actual proteins seen in nature, enabling unprecedented capability and control in de novo protein design. However, current state-of-the-art diffusion models generate protein structures, which limits the scope of their training data and restricts generations to a small and biased subset of protein design space. Here, we introduce a general-purpose diffusion framework, EvoDiff, that combines evolutionary-scale data with the distinct conditioning capabilities of diffusion models for controllable protein generation in sequence space. EvoDiff generates high-fidelity, diverse, and structurally-plausible proteins that cover natural sequence and functional space. We show experimentally that EvoDiff generations express, fold, and exhibit expected secondary structure elements. Critically, EvoDiff can generate proteins inaccessible to structure-based models, such as those with disordered regions, while maintaining the ability to design scaffolds for functional structural motifs. We validate the universality of our sequence-based formulation by experimentally characterizing intrinsically-disordered mitochondrial targeting signals, metal-binding proteins, and protein binders designed using EvoDiff. We envision that EvoDiff will expand capabilities in protein engineering beyond the structure-function paradigm toward programmable, sequence-first design.

Protein structure generation via folding diffusion
Kevin Wu, Kevin Yang, Rianne van den Berg et al.|Nature Communications|2024
Cited by 142Open Access

The ability to computationally generate novel yet physically foldable protein structures could lead to new biological discoveries and new treatments targeting yet incurable diseases. Despite recent advances in protein structure prediction, directly generating diverse, novel protein structures from neural networks remains difficult. In this work, we present a diffusion-based generative model that generates protein backbone structures via a procedure inspired by the natural folding process. We describe a protein backbone structure as a sequence of angles capturing the relative orientation of the constituent backbone atoms, and generate structures by denoising from a random, unfolded state towards a stable folded structure. Not only does this mirror how proteins natively twist into energetically favorable conformations, the inherent shift and rotational invariance of this representation crucially alleviates the need for more complex equivariant networks. We train a denoising diffusion probabilistic model with a simple transformer backbone and demonstrate that our resulting model unconditionally generates highly realistic protein structures with complexity and structural patterns akin to those of naturally-occurring proteins. As a useful resource, we release an open-source codebase and trained models for protein structure diffusion.