AI system Synthegy enables chemists to design molecules with natural language

Researchers at EPFL have developed Synthegy, an AI framework that lets chemists guide complex molecule synthesis using simple language instructions. The system combines traditional algorithms with large language models to evaluate and rank reaction pathways. It also aids in understanding reaction mechanisms, potentially speeding up drug discovery.

Creating complex molecules for drugs or materials traditionally demands years of expertise in retrosynthesis, where chemists work backward from a target compound to identify starting materials and reaction routes. Synthegy, developed by a team led by Philippe Schwaller at EPFL, changes this by allowing chemists to input natural language instructions, such as forming a ring early or avoiding protecting groups. Standard software generates pathways, which the AI then scores and explains for alignment with those goals, as described in a paper published in Matter. Andres M. Bran, the first author, said, 'With Synthegy, we're giving chemists the power to just talk, allowing them to iterate much faster and navigate more complex synthetic ideas.' The framework applies similar reasoning to reaction mechanisms, breaking them into electron movements and evaluating feasibility under specified conditions. In a double-blind study with 36 chemists providing 368 evaluations, the system's assessments matched human judgments 71.2% of the time. Larger language models excelled in analyzing functional groups and full routes. Bran added, 'The connection between synthesis planning and mechanisms is very exciting: we usually use mechanisms to discover new reactions that enable us to synthesize new molecules.' Contributors include the National Centre of Competence in Research Catalysis and b12 Labs. The journal reference is Andres M. Bran et al., Matter, 2026; DOI: 10.1016/j.matt.2026.102812.

Articoli correlati

Illustration of US Treasury Secretary warning bank executives about AI cyberattack risks from Anthropic's Claude Mythos.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Il Dipartimento del Tesoro statunitense avverte le banche sui rischi di attacchi informatici basati sull'IA dopo l'annuncio di Claude Mythos di Anthropic

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

Sulla scia del lancio da parte di Anthropic del suo potente modello di IA Claude Mythos, in grado di rilevare e sfruttare le vulnerabilità del software, il Segretario al Tesoro degli Stati Uniti ha convocato i vertici bancari per sottolineare la crescente minaccia di attacchi informatici guidati dall'intelligenza artificiale. L'iniziativa evidenzia le crescenti preoccupazioni, dato che l'accesso all'IA è limitato a una coalizione tecnologica tramite il Project Glasswing.

A Chinese research team has developed an AI platform called GalaxyVS that screens potential drugs in seconds.

Riportato dall'IA

Isomorphic Labs, a spinoff of Google DeepMind, announced that its AI-designed drugs are progressing to human trials. President Max Jaderberg shared the news at WIRED Health in London, highlighting a “broad and exciting pipeline of new medicines.” The development builds on DeepMind’s AlphaFold platform.

The UK government’s AI Security Institute has released an evaluation of Anthropic's Mythos Preview AI model, confirming its strong performance in multistep cyber infiltration challenges. Mythos became the first model to fully complete a demanding 32-step network attack simulation known as 'The Last Ones.' The institute cautions that real-world defenses may limit such automated threats.

Riportato dall'IA

A repurposed breast cancer drug called MDL-001 has shown promise in lab and animal studies against a range of viruses, including flu, covid-19, RSV and norovirus. Developed by California-based Model Medicines using AI, the pill targets a conserved enzyme domain in viruses. A clinical trial is planned for early next year.

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta