lucidrains / ddpm-proteins

A denoising diffusion probabilistic model (DDPM) tailored for conditional generation of protein distograms

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Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model for Proteins

Implementation of Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model in Pytorch. It is a new approach to generative modeling that may have the potential to rival GANs. It uses denoising score matching to estimate the gradient of the data distribution, followed by Langevin sampling to sample from the true distribution. This implementation was transcribed from the official Tensorflow version here.

This specific repository will be using a heavily modifying version of the U-net for learning on protein structure, with eventual conditioning from MSA Transformers attention heads.

** at around 40k iterations **

Install

$ pip install ddpm-proteins

Training

We are using weights & biases for experimental tracking

First you need to login

$ wandb login

Then you will need to cache all the MSA attention embeddings by first running. For some reason, the below needs to be done multiple times to cache all the proteins correctly (it does work though). I'll get around to fixing this.

$ python cache.py

Finally, you can begin training by invoking

$ python train.py

If you would like to clear or recompute the cache (ie after changing the fetch MSA function), just run

$ rm -rf ~/.cache.ddpm-proteins

Todo

Usage

import torch
from ddpm_proteins import Unet, GaussianDiffusion

model = Unet(
    dim = 64,
    dim_mults = (1, 2, 4, 8)
)

diffusion = GaussianDiffusion(
    model,
    image_size = 128,
    timesteps = 1000,   # number of steps
    loss_type = 'l1'    # L1 or L2
)

training_images = torch.randn(8, 3, 128, 128)
loss = diffusion(training_images)
loss.backward()
# after a lot of training

sampled_images = diffusion.sample(batch_size = 4)
sampled_images.shape # (4, 3, 128, 128)

Or, if you simply want to pass in a folder name and the desired image dimensions, you can use the Trainer class to easily train a model.

from ddpm_proteins import Unet, GaussianDiffusion, Trainer

model = Unet(
    dim = 64,
    dim_mults = (1, 2, 4, 8)
).cuda()

diffusion = GaussianDiffusion(
    model,
    image_size = 128,
    timesteps = 1000,   # number of steps
    loss_type = 'l1'    # L1 or L2
).cuda()

trainer = Trainer(
    diffusion,
    'path/to/your/images',
    train_batch_size = 32,
    train_lr = 2e-5,
    train_num_steps = 700000,         # total training steps
    gradient_accumulate_every = 2,    # gradient accumulation steps
    ema_decay = 0.995,                # exponential moving average decay
    fp16 = True                       # turn on mixed precision training with apex
)

trainer.train()

Samples and model checkpoints will be logged to ./results periodically

Citations

@misc{ho2020denoising,
    title   = {Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models},
    author  = {Jonathan Ho and Ajay Jain and Pieter Abbeel},
    year    = {2020},
    eprint  = {2006.11239},
    archivePrefix = {arXiv},
    primaryClass = {cs.LG}
}
@inproceedings{anonymous2021improved,
    title   = {Improved Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models},
    author  = {Anonymous},
    booktitle = {Submitted to International Conference on Learning Representations},
    year    = {2021},
    url     = {https://openreview.net/forum?id=-NEXDKk8gZ},
    note    = {under review}
}
@article{Rao2021.02.12.430858,
    author  = {Rao, Roshan and Liu, Jason and Verkuil, Robert and Meier, Joshua and Canny, John F. and Abbeel, Pieter and Sercu, Tom and Rives, Alexander},
    title   = {MSA Transformer},
    year    = {2021},
    publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory},
    URL     = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2021/02/13/2021.02.12.430858},
    journal = {bioRxiv}
}

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A denoising diffusion probabilistic model (DDPM) tailored for conditional generation of protein distograms

License:MIT License


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