IIT Bombay's BrainProt & DrugProtAI: Decoding Brain Diseases Faster

A team at IIT Bombay has developed two integrated platforms, BrainProt v3.0 and DrugProtAI, to accelerate brain disease research. BrainProt is a first-of-its-kind database unifying scattered genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic data for 56 human brain diseases. DrugProtAI uses AI to predict a protein's "druggability index," helping researchers prioritize targets before costly experiments. Together, they create a pipeline allowing scientists to move from disease marker identification to druggability assessment within an hour.

Key Points: IIT Bombay's AI Tools for Brain Disease Research & Drug Discovery

  • Unifies multi-omics data for 56 brain diseases
  • Predicts protein druggability with AI
  • Integrates data from over 1,800 patient samples
  • Enables rapid research pipeline from marker to drug target
2 min read

IIT Bombay's new smart platform to help researchers decode brain diseases

IIT Bombay launches BrainProt v3.0 and DrugProtAI, smart platforms to unify brain disease data and predict druggable protein targets for researchers.

"Before investing years of work... DrugProtAI predicts whether the protein is druggable - Dr. Ankit Halder"

New Delhi, Jan 22

A team of bioengineers at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay has developed new smart platforms --BrainProt and DrugProtAI -- that unify data on scattered brain diseases to help researchers find markers, explore treatments, and pinpoint druggable targets.

BrainProt v3.0 is a database that combines various types of biological data -- from genes to proteins -- into a single platform to enable systematic insights into human brain function in both healthy and diseased states.

It is the first system to integrate multi-disease data from genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and biomarker research and multi-database information into one portal.

"BrainProt also includes resources to identify and understand protein expression differences between the left and right hemispheres of the human brain across 20 neuroanatomical regions. This is the first resource of its kind," said Prof. Sanjeeva Srivastava from the Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, IIT Bombay.

BrainProt includes data on 56 human brain diseases and 52 multi-omics datasets derived from more than 1,800 patient samples. These datasets include transcriptomic data for 11 diseases and proteomic data for six diseases.

For each disease, users can examine genes and proteins frequently associated with the disease, assess how strongly these genes and proteins are already supported by existing medical and scientific databases, and how their activity levels change in patient samples.

DrugProtAI was developed to understand whether a protein can be druggable (has the biological and physical characteristics needed to be a useful drug target) before doing costly experiments.

This is crucial because only about 10 per cent of human proteins currently have an FDA-approved drug, with another 3-4 per cent under investigation.

"Before investing years of work in a protein target, DrugProtAI predicts whether the protein is druggable by looking beyond the protein's sequence, such as cellular location, structural attributes, and other unique characteristics it has," said Dr. Ankit Halder, co-author of the study.

The tool generates a "druggability index" -- a probability score indicating how likely a protein is to be druggable. A higher score suggests that the protein shares many properties with proteins that already have approved drugs, while a lower score indicates that drug development would be more challenging.

"By integrating DrugProtAI directly into BrainProt, we created a pipeline where researchers can move from identifying a disease marker to examining its expression patterns to evaluating its druggability and exploring existing compounds or clinical trials, all within an hour," Halder said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Arjun K
Incredible work by Prof. Srivastava and team. Integrating data from 1800+ patient samples is no small feat. This kind of 'Make in India' innovation in biotech is exactly what we need. Hope it gets adequate funding and support to reach its full potential.
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David E
As someone in the pharmaceutical research field, the "druggability index" from DrugProtAI is a brilliant concept. Prioritizing targets before costly experiments can dramatically accelerate drug discovery pipelines globally. Well done, IIT-B!
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Siddharth J
A very promising step. My only respectful criticism is about access. Will this platform be freely available to researchers in all Indian universities and medical colleges, or will it be behind a paywall? Truly transformative tools must be accessible to all our scientists.
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Nisha Z
This is the kind of news that makes my day! Combining AI with biology to tackle brain diseases is the future. So proud of our institutes. Hope this leads to affordable treatments for conditions like Alzheimer's that affect so many Indian families.
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Rohit P
From identifying a marker to checking druggability in an hour? That's mind-blowing speed! This can put Indian medical research on the world map in a big way. Kudos to the team. Jai Hind! 🙏

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