Score: 3

SimpleFold: Folding Proteins is Simpler than You Think

Published: September 23, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2509.18480v1

By: Yuyang Wang , Jiarui Lu , Navdeep Jaitly and more

BigTech Affiliations: Apple

Potential Business Impact:

Makes protein folding faster and simpler.

Business Areas:
Bioinformatics Biotechnology, Data and Analytics, Science and Engineering

Protein folding models have achieved groundbreaking results typically via a combination of integrating domain knowledge into the architectural blocks and training pipelines. Nonetheless, given the success of generative models across different but related problems, it is natural to question whether these architectural designs are a necessary condition to build performant models. In this paper, we introduce SimpleFold, the first flow-matching based protein folding model that solely uses general purpose transformer blocks. Protein folding models typically employ computationally expensive modules involving triangular updates, explicit pair representations or multiple training objectives curated for this specific domain. Instead, SimpleFold employs standard transformer blocks with adaptive layers and is trained via a generative flow-matching objective with an additional structural term. We scale SimpleFold to 3B parameters and train it on approximately 9M distilled protein structures together with experimental PDB data. On standard folding benchmarks, SimpleFold-3B achieves competitive performance compared to state-of-the-art baselines, in addition SimpleFold demonstrates strong performance in ensemble prediction which is typically difficult for models trained via deterministic reconstruction objectives. Due to its general-purpose architecture, SimpleFold shows efficiency in deployment and inference on consumer-level hardware. SimpleFold challenges the reliance on complex domain-specific architectures designs in protein folding, opening up an alternative design space for future progress.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Repos / Data Links

Page Count
28 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Machine Learning (CS)