Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been widely recognized as a promising solution to combat antimicrobial resistance of microorganisms due to the increasing abuse of antibiotics in medicine and agriculture around the globe. In this study, we propose UniAMP, a systematic prediction framework for discovering AMPs. We observe that feature vectors used in various existing studies constructed from peptide information, such as sequence, composition, and structure, can be augmented and even replaced by information inferred by deep learning models. Specifically, we use a feature vector with 2924 values inferred by two deep learning models, UniRep and ProtT5, to demonstrate that such inferred information of peptides suffice for the task, with the help of our proposed deep neural network model composed of fully connected layers and transformer encoders for predicting the antibacterial activity of peptides. Evaluation results demonstrate superior performance of our proposed model on both balanced benchmark datasets and imbalanced test datasets compared with existing studies. Subsequently, we analyze the relations among peptide sequences, manually extracted features, and automatically inferred information by deep learning models, leading to observations that the inferred information is more comprehensive and non-redundant for the task of predicting AMPs. Moreover, this approach alleviates the impact of the scarcity of positive data and demonstrates great potential in future research and applications.
Keywords: Antimicrobial peptides; Deep learning; Feature extraction; Protein language model.
© 2025. The Author(s).