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CHIMERA-Bench: A Benchmark Dataset for Epitope-Specific Antibody Design

arXiv cs.LG / 3/17/2026

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Key Points

  • Chimera-Bench provides a unified benchmark for epitope-conditioned CDR sequence-structure co-design, addressing the lack of standardization in antibody design benchmarks.
  • It curates 2,922 antibody–antigen complexes with epitope and paratope annotations, enabling standardized evaluation.
  • It defines three biologically motivated data splits (unseen epitopes, unseen antigen folds, prospective temporal targets) to test generalization.
  • It supplies a comprehensive evaluation protocol with five metric groups, including novel epitope-specificity measures, and includes code/data at GitHub for community use.

Abstract

Computational antibody design has seen rapid methodological progress, with dozens of deep generative methods proposed in the past three years, yet the field lacks a standardized benchmark for fair comparison and model development. These methods are evaluated on different SAbDab snapshots, non-overlapping test sets, and incompatible metrics, and the literature fragments the design problem into numerous sub-tasks with no common definition. We introduce \textsc{Chimera-Bench} (\textbf{C}DR \textbf{M}odeling with \textbf{E}pitope-guided \textbf{R}edesign), a unified benchmark built around a single canonical task: \emph{epitope-conditioned CDR sequence-structure co-design}. \textsc{Chimera-Bench} provides (1) a curated, deduplicated dataset of \textbf{2,922} antibody-antigen complexes with epitope and paratope annotations; (2) three biologically motivated splits testing generalization to unseen epitopes, unseen antigen folds, and prospective temporal targets; and (3) a comprehensive evaluation protocol with five metric groups including novel epitope-specificity measures. We benchmark representative methods spanning different generative paradigms and report results across all splits. \textsc{Chimera-Bench} is the largest dataset of its kind for the antibody design problem, allowing the community to develop and test novel methods and evaluate their generalizability. The source code and data are available at: https://github.com/mansoor181/chimera-bench.git