Predicting high-fitness viral protein variants with Bayesian active learning and biophysics.

Publication date: Jun 17, 2025

The early detection of high-fitness viral variants is critical for pandemic response, yet limited experimental resources at the onset of variant emergence hinder effective identification. To address this, we introduce an active learning framework, VIRAL (Viral Identification via Rapid Active Learning), that integrates protein language model, Gaussian process with uncertainty estimation, and a biophysical model to predict the fitness of novel variants in a few-shot learning setting. By benchmarking on past SARS-CoV-2 data, we demonstrate that our method accelerates the identification of high-fitness variants by up to fivefold compared to random sampling while requiring experimental characterization of fewer than 1% of possible variants. We also demonstrate that our framework effectively identifies sites that are frequently mutated during natural viral evolution with a predictive advantage of up to two years compared to baseline strategies, particularly those enabling antibody escape while preserving ACE2 binding. Through systematic analysis of different acquisition strategies, we show that incorporating uncertainty in variant selection enables broader exploration of the sequence landscape, leading to the identification of evolutionarily distant but potentially dangerous variants. Our results suggest that VIRAL could serve as an effective early warning system for identifying concerning SARS-CoV-2 variants and potentially emerging viruses with pandemic potential before they achieve widespread circulation.

Concepts Keywords
Antibody active learning
Biophysics Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2
Fitness Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2
Frequently antibody escape
Viruses Bayes Theorem
Biophysics
COVID-19
Evolution, Molecular
Humans
Machine Learning
Mutation
pandemic preparedness
protein evolution
protein language model
SARS-CoV-2
Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus
Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus
Viral Proteins
Viral Proteins

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO protein
disease IDO process
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH COVID-19

Original Article

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