A transformer model for de novo sequencing of data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry data
- PMID: 40596427
- DOI: 10.1038/s41592-025-02718-y
A transformer model for de novo sequencing of data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry data
Abstract
A core computational challenge in the analysis of mass spectrometry data is the de novo sequencing problem, in which the generating amino acid sequence is inferred directly from an observed fragmentation spectrum without the use of a sequence database. Recently, deep learning models have made substantial advances in de novo sequencing by learning from massive datasets of high-confidence labeled mass spectra. However, these methods are designed primarily for data-dependent acquisition experiments. Over the past decade, the field of mass spectrometry has been moving toward using data-independent acquisition (DIA) protocols for the analysis of complex proteomic samples owing to their superior specificity and reproducibility. Hence, we present a de novo sequencing model called Cascadia, which uses a transformer architecture to handle the more complex data generated by DIA protocols. In comparisons with existing approaches for de novo sequencing of DIA data, Cascadia achieves substantially improved performance across a range of instruments and experimental protocols.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: The MacCoss Lab at the University of Washington receives funding from Agilent, Bruker, Sciex, Shimadzu, Thermo Fisher Scientific and Waters to support the development of Skyline, a quantitative analysis software tool. M.J.M. is a paid consultant for Thermo Fisher Scientific. The other authors declare no competing interests.
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