logo
SandboxAQ improves drug discovery with data creation

SandboxAQ improves drug discovery with data creation

Tahawul Tech9 hours ago

SandboxAQ, an artificial intelligence startup, recently released a wealth of data in hopes it will speed up the discovery of new medical treatments.
The goal is to help scientists predict whether a drug will bind to its target in the human body.
But while the data is backed up by real-world scientific experiments, it did not come from a lab. Instead, SandboxAQ, which has raised nearly $1 billion in venture capital, generated the data using Nvidia's chips and will feed it back into AI models that it hopes scientists can use to rapidly predict whether a small-molecule pharmaceutical will bind to the protein that researchers are targeting, a key question that must be answered before a drug candidate can move forward.
For example, if a drug is meant to inhibit a biological process like the progression of a disease, scientists can use the tool to predict whether the drug molecule is likely to bind to the proteins involved in that process. The approach is an emerging field that combines traditional scientific computing techniques with advancements in AI. In many fields, scientists have long had equations that can precisely predict how atoms combine into molecules.
But even for relatively small three-dimensional pharmaceutical molecules, the potential combinations become far too vast to calculate manually, even with today's fastest computers. So SandboxAQ's approach was to use existing experimental data to calculate about 5.2 million new, 'synthetic' three-dimensional molecules – molecules that haven't been observed in the real world, but were calculated with equations based on real-world data.
That synthetic data, which SandboxAQ is releasing publicly, can be used to train AI models that can predict whether a new drug molecule is likely to stick to the protein researchers are targeting in a fraction of the time it would take to calculate it manually, while retaining accuracy. SandboxAQ will charge money for its own AI models developed with the data, which it hopes will get results that rival running lab experiments, but virtually.
'This is a long-standing problem in biology that we've all, as an industry, been trying to solve for', said Nadia Harhen, general manager of AI simulation at SandboxAQ. 'All of these computationally generated structures are tagged to a ground-truth experimental data, and so when you pick this data set and you train models, you can actually use the synthetic data in a way that's never been done before'.
Source: Reuters
Image Credit: Stock Image

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bans and fees cut plastic bag waste in the environment, study reveals
Bans and fees cut plastic bag waste in the environment, study reveals

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Bans and fees cut plastic bag waste in the environment, study reveals

Stricter plastic bag policies have cut the amount of litter in the environment, a US study has found, which could indicate the UAE may also see improvements thanks to its own restrictions. The research found that in areas of the US where restrictions had been introduced, plastic bags accounted for a reduced proportion of shoreline waste. More than 100 countries have imposed plastic bag bans or fees, and while these have reduced consumption, researchers behind the new paper said that until now their effectiveness at actually cutting plastic waste in the environment had not been confirmed. Scientists looked at data from more than 45,000 shoreline clean-up operations in the US and measured this alongside the plastic bag policies that were in place. They considered hundreds of statewide and more localised plastic rules brought in between 2017 and 2023. They found that in areas with restrictions, there was a 25 per cent to 47 per cent decrease in plastic bags as a share of all waste collected, compared to areas without limits. One of the study's two authors, Dr Anna Papp, of Columbia University in New York, told The National she was 'surprised to see how effective plastic bag policies have been in reducing plastic bag shoreline litter', given that many factors – such as consumer behaviour and waste management – influenced a plastic bag's journey. 'However, it's important to note that these policies don't completely eliminate plastic bags in the environment but do help mitigate it,' she added. Fees not fines The other author, Dr Kimberly Oremus, an associate professor at the University of Delaware, said the results suggested fees for plastic bags may be more effective than bans. 'We can only say definitively that both [fees and bans] are effective,' she said. 'And both full bans and fees are more effective than partial bans. 'We hypothesise that fees may cover more retailers than full bans, such as take-out bags from restaurants, and fees can be used as revenue to clean-up shorelines.' The study also indicates that wildlife entanglement might fall between 30 per cent and 37 per cent when plastic bag policies are in place, although the researchers said they had limited data on this. Other scientists not linked to the new study have backed up its findings. Dr Marcus Eriksen, co-founder of the 5 Gyres Institute, a US-based organisation that researches plastic pollution and works to reduce it, said the effects of plastic bag policies had been seen in southern California, where he lives. 'I witnessed the 10-year battle to ban plastic bags across the state,' he said. 'There were sceptics about the effectiveness, but the data came in from shoreline clean-ups and we saw a significant decline in plastic bags present, not only in coastal clean-ups but in municipal data on roadside clean-ups.' Turning the tide The UAE is one of many countries where restrictions have significantly reduced plastic bag use, with the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi having said a ban on single-use plastic bags in the emirate introduced on June 1, 2022 cut the number entering circulation by 364,000. Initiatives to recover and recycle plastic bottles have also been brought in. A ban on single-use plastic bags has been in force in all emirates since 2023, alongside restrictions on other plastic items. Dr Eriksen has previously researched the effect of plastic pollution in the UAE, co-writing a study showing that in many camels, large amounts of plastic, including ropes and bags, have accumulated in their stomachs. He said manufacturers should have to bear some costs associated with the entire lifecycle of plastic bags. 'A good EPR [extended producer responsibility] scheme whereby bag manufacturers contribute to a clean-up fund, in combination with a bag fee, would go a long way to eliminating bag use,' he said. While the latest research indicates that restrictions reduce plastic bag litter, Dr Papp warned this was 'only a small part of the larger plastic pollution problem'. 'Our results show that bag policies' effects are limited to reducing plastic bags and not other plastic items, so they are nowhere close to a solution for eliminating plastic waste in the environment,' she said. 'Addressing the production of plastics alongside consumption and waste, as currently under consideration in the UN Plastics Treaty, is likely crucial for a more comprehensive approach.'

Google's AI and digital tools added $5.9bn to UAE economy in 2024
Google's AI and digital tools added $5.9bn to UAE economy in 2024

Arabian Business

time3 hours ago

  • Arabian Business

Google's AI and digital tools added $5.9bn to UAE economy in 2024

Google has revealed that its products and AI-powered tools contributed an estimated AED 21.8bn ($5.9bn) to the UAE economy in 2024, according to its newly launched Economic Impact Report, conducted by Public First. The report highlights how platforms such as Google Search, YouTube, Maps, Play and Ads are helping people, businesses, developers and content creators thrive in the UAE's fast-evolving digital economy. Anthony Nakache, Managing Director for Google in the Middle East and North Africa, said: 'We're incredibly proud to be a partner in the UAE's boundless ambitions. The report reflects our investment in accelerating the country's ambitious journey towards a diversified, AI-powered economy. 'Through strategic investments, local partnerships, and our AI-powered tools, we're bringing substantial economic value and empowering individuals, businesses, and communities in the UAE.' Google 2024 UAE Impact Report key findings 1. Making everyday life easier Google services generated consumer benefits worth AED683 ($186) per month for the average person in the United Arab Emirates 63 per cent of UAE adults used Gemini, Google's AI assistant, with 90 per cent saying it helped them be more productive 71 per cent of users said Gemini is easier to use in Arabic than other AI chatbots 50 per cent of adults said Google Search is essential to their daily lives 89 per cent relied on Google Maps and Waze to avoid getting lost 90 per cent said mobile payments through GPay or GWallet made their lives easier 2. Fuelling business growth 91 per cent of UAE businesses use at least one AI tool in their workflows 73 per cent of people aged 18–24 use Google Search weekly for shopping or browsing 80 per cent use Google Maps and Waze monthly to locate local businesses 86 per cent check Google reviews before visiting a business 94 per cent compare product prices via Google Search monthly 97 per cent of public sector employees said Google AI tools improved workplace productivity 3. Supporting the creator and developer ecosystem AED455m ($124m) was generated in revenue by UAE-based developers via the Android App Economy More than 600 YouTube channels in the UAE now have over 1m subscribers—a 15 per cent year-on-year rise Over 430,000 people in the UAE have received digital and AI training via Google's Maharat Min Google program since 2018. 20,000+ journalists and journalism students have been trained by the Google News Initiative across MENA, including the United Arab Emirates The findings come as the UAE accelerates its shift toward a knowledge-based economy, with AI and digital skilling playing a central role in national development strategies.

Musk's X to offer investment, trading in 'super app' push, FT reports
Musk's X to offer investment, trading in 'super app' push, FT reports

Zawya

time4 hours ago

  • Zawya

Musk's X to offer investment, trading in 'super app' push, FT reports

X CEO Linda Yaccarino has said users will soon be able to make investments or trades on the social media platform, the Financial Times reported on Thursday, a move to support billionaire owner Elon Musk's vision to create an "everything app." In an interview with the publisher, Yaccarino said the company was exploring the introduction of an X credit or debit card, which could come as soon as this year. Musk, who in April 2022 clinched a $44 billion deal to buy Twitter and later rebranded it as X, has signaled plans to model it as a "super app," similar to China's WeChat. The social media platform did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. "2025 X will connect you in ways never thought possible. X TV, X Money, Grok and more," Yaccarino wrote in a post in December last year. Payments giant Visa and X partnered to offer direct payment solutions to customers of the social media app, a person familiar with the matter said earlier this year. A super app, or what Musk refers to as an "everything app," has been described as the Swiss army knife of mobile apps, offering a suite of services for users such as messaging, social networking, payments and e-commerce shopping. X hired NBCUniversal advertising chief Yaccarino as CEO in 2023 amid advertiser exodus from the platform as they worried that their ads could appear next to inappropriate content. Yaccarino said that 96% of X's ad clients prior to acquisition had now come back to the platform, the Financial Times report said. The company is poised for its first year of ad revenue growth this year since its acquisition by Musk, according to data from research firm Emarketer in March. X had filed a lawsuit in federal court in Texas against the World Federation of Advertisers, accusing them of unlawfully conspiring to boycott the site and causing it to lose revenue. (Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store