Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Science

Benchmark of 1.4 million checked protein structures could sharpen AI predictions

University of Missouri researchers have released the world's largest collection of protein models with quality assessment—a groundbreaking new resource that could accelerate drug development for diseases such as Alzheimer's and cancer. The database, called PSBench, includes 1.4 million annotated pro...

Benchmark of 1.4 million checked protein structures could sharpen AI predictions
Image: Phys.org
University of Missouri researchers have released the world's largest collection of protein models with quality assessment—a groundbreaking new resource that could accelerate drug development for diseases such as Alzheimer's and cancer. The database, called PSBench, includes 1.4 million annotated protein structure models, all verified by independent experts. It gives scientists the reliable information they need to build more accurate artificial intelligence (AI) systems for assessing the quality of protein structure models, which is critical for developing future medical treatments.

Originally published at Phys.org

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