skills/esm/SKILL.md
Comprehensive toolkit for EvolutionaryScale protein language models including ESM3 (generative multimodal design across sequence, structure, and function) and ESM C (efficient embeddings). Use for protein sequence/structure/function tasks, inverse folding, embeddings, variant design, and ESMFold2 structure prediction via Biohub. Supports local open weights (Python 3.12, esm on PyPI) and cloud Forge/Biohub APIs with ESM_API_KEY authentication.
npx skillsauth add K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills esmInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
ESM provides state-of-the-art protein language models for understanding, generating, and designing proteins. This skill enables working with two model families: ESM3 for generative protein design across sequence, structure, and function, and ESM C for efficient protein representation learning and embeddings.
Generate novel protein sequences with desired properties using multimodal generative modeling.
When to use:
Basic usage:
from esm.models.esm3 import ESM3
from esm.sdk.api import ESM3InferenceClient, ESMProtein, GenerationConfig
# Load model locally
model: ESM3InferenceClient = ESM3.from_pretrained("esm3-sm-open-v1").to("cuda")
# Create protein prompt
protein = ESMProtein(sequence="MPRT___KEND") # '_' represents masked positions
# Generate completion
protein = model.generate(protein, GenerationConfig(track="sequence", num_steps=8))
print(protein.sequence)
For remote/cloud usage via Forge API:
import os
import esm
from esm.sdk.api import ESMProtein, GenerationConfig
# Same interface as local ESM3 — token from ESM_API_KEY (see Authentication)
model = esm.sdk.client("esm3-medium-2024-08", token=os.environ["ESM_API_KEY"])
# Generate
protein = model.generate(protein, GenerationConfig(track="sequence", num_steps=8))
See references/esm3-api.md for detailed ESM3 model specifications, advanced generation configurations, and multimodal prompting examples.
Use ESM3's structure track for structure prediction from sequence or inverse folding (sequence design from structure).
Structure prediction:
from esm.sdk.api import ESM3InferenceClient, ESMProtein, GenerationConfig
# Predict structure from sequence
protein = ESMProtein(sequence="MPRTKEINDAGLIVHSP...")
protein_with_structure = model.generate(
protein,
GenerationConfig(track="structure", num_steps=protein.sequence.count("_"))
)
# Access predicted structure
coordinates = protein_with_structure.coordinates # 3D coordinates
pdb_string = protein_with_structure.to_pdb()
Inverse folding (sequence from structure):
# Design sequence for a target structure
protein_with_structure = ESMProtein.from_pdb("target_structure.pdb")
protein_with_structure.sequence = None # Remove sequence
# Generate sequence that folds to this structure
designed_protein = model.generate(
protein_with_structure,
GenerationConfig(track="sequence", num_steps=50, temperature=0.7)
)
Generate high-quality embeddings for downstream tasks like function prediction, classification, or similarity analysis.
When to use:
Basic usage:
from esm.models.esmc import ESMC
from esm.sdk.api import ESMProtein
# Load ESM C model
model = ESMC.from_pretrained("esmc-300m").to("cuda")
# Get embeddings
protein = ESMProtein(sequence="MPRTKEINDAGLIVHSP...")
protein_tensor = model.encode(protein)
# Generate embeddings
embeddings = model.forward(protein_tensor)
Batch processing:
# Encode multiple proteins
proteins = [
ESMProtein(sequence="MPRTKEIND..."),
ESMProtein(sequence="AGLIVHSPQ..."),
ESMProtein(sequence="KTEFLNDGR...")
]
embeddings_list = [model.logits(model.forward(model.encode(p))) for p in proteins]
See references/esm-c-api.md for ESM C model details, efficiency comparisons, and advanced embedding strategies.
Use ESM3's function track to generate proteins with specific functional annotations or predict function from sequence.
Function-conditioned generation:
from esm.sdk.api import ESMProtein, FunctionAnnotation, GenerationConfig
# Create protein with desired function
protein = ESMProtein(
sequence="_" * 200, # Generate 200 residue protein
function_annotations=[
FunctionAnnotation(label="fluorescent_protein", start=50, end=150)
]
)
# Generate sequence with specified function
functional_protein = model.generate(
protein,
GenerationConfig(track="sequence", num_steps=200)
)
Iteratively refine protein designs using ESM3's chain-of-thought generation approach.
from esm.sdk.api import GenerationConfig
# Multi-step refinement
protein = ESMProtein(sequence="MPRT" + "_" * 100 + "KEND")
# Step 1: Generate initial structure
config = GenerationConfig(track="structure", num_steps=50)
protein = model.generate(protein, config)
# Step 2: Refine sequence based on structure
config = GenerationConfig(track="sequence", num_steps=50, temperature=0.5)
protein = model.generate(protein, config)
# Step 3: Predict function
config = GenerationConfig(track="function", num_steps=20)
protein = model.generate(protein, config)
Process multiple proteins efficiently using Forge's async executor.
import os
import asyncio
import esm
client = esm.sdk.client("esm3-medium-2024-08", token=os.environ["ESM_API_KEY"])
# Async batch processing
async def batch_generate(proteins_list):
tasks = [
client.async_generate(protein, GenerationConfig(track="sequence"))
for protein in proteins_list
]
return await asyncio.gather(*tasks)
# Execute
proteins = [ESMProtein(sequence=f"MPRT{'_' * 50}KEND") for _ in range(10)]
results = asyncio.run(batch_generate(proteins))
See references/forge-api.md for detailed Forge API documentation, authentication, rate limits, and batch processing patterns.
ESM3 Models (Generative):
esm3-sm-open-v1 (1.4B) - Open weights, local usage, good for experimentationesm3-medium-2024-08 (7B) - Best balance of quality and speed (Forge only)esm3-large-2024-03 (98B) - Highest quality, slower (Forge only)ESM C Models (Embeddings):
esmc-300m (30 layers) - Lightweight, fast inference (open weights, local)esmc-600m (36 layers) - Balanced performance (open weights, local)esmc-6b-2024-12 (80 layers) - Maximum quality (Forge API; local 6B weights require Forge or SageMaker)Selection criteria:
esm3-sm-open-v1 or esmc-300mesm3-medium-2024-08 via Forgeesm3-large-2024-03 or esmc-6b-2024-12 via ForgeInstall from PyPI (esm on PyPI by EvolutionaryScale). Requires Python 3.12 (>=3.12,<3.13 for current releases).
Basic installation:
uv pip install "esm==3.2.3"
With Flash Attention (recommended for faster inference on NVIDIA GPUs):
uv pip install "esm==3.2.3"
uv pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
The Forge client ships with the esm package — no extra install for cloud inference.
Forge API access requires an API key. Never hardcode tokens in scripts or commit them to version control.
ESM_API_KEY is already set in the environment..env for ESM_API_KEY only (do not load unrelated secrets).import os
token = os.environ["ESM_API_KEY"] # raises KeyError if unset
esm.sdk.client() reads ESM_API_KEY automatically when token is omitted.
Biohub platform: EvolutionaryScale is migrating some services (including ESMFold2 structure prediction) to biohub.ai. SDK class names may still reference "Forge". See references/biohub-platform.md for ESMFold2 and Biohub-specific setup.
For detailed examples and complete workflows, see references/workflows.md which includes:
This skill includes comprehensive reference documentation:
references/esm3-api.md - ESM3 model architecture, API reference, generation parameters, and multimodal promptingreferences/esm-c-api.md - ESM C model details, embedding strategies, and performance optimizationreferences/forge-api.md - Forge platform documentation, authentication, batch processing, and deploymentreferences/biohub-platform.md - Biohub API migration, ESMFold2 structure prediction, and developer-console authreferences/workflows.md - Complete examples and common workflow patternsThese references contain detailed API specifications, parameter descriptions, and advanced usage patterns. Load them as needed for specific tasks.
For generation tasks:
esm3-sm-open-v1)For embedding tasks:
For production deployment:
ESM is designed for beneficial applications in protein engineering, drug discovery, and scientific research. Follow the Responsible Biodesign Framework (https://responsiblebiodesign.ai/) when designing novel proteins. Consider biosafety and ethical implications of protein designs before experimental validation.
development
Spectral similarity and compound identification for metabolomics. Use for comparing mass spectra, computing similarity scores (cosine, modified cosine), and identifying unknown compounds from spectral libraries. Best for metabolite identification, spectral matching, library searching. For full LC-MS/MS proteomics pipelines use pyopenms.
development
Convert files and office documents to Markdown. Supports PDF, DOCX, PPTX, XLSX, images (with OCR), audio (with transcription), HTML, CSV, JSON, XML, ZIP, YouTube URLs, EPubs and more.
development
Generate comprehensive market research reports (50+ pages) in the style of top consulting firms (McKinsey, BCG, Gartner). Features professional LaTeX formatting, extensive visual generation with scientific-schematics and generate-image, deep integration with research-lookup for data gathering, and multi-framework strategic analysis including Porter Five Forces, PESTLE, SWOT, TAM/SAM/SOM, and BCG Matrix.
testing
Comprehensive markdown and Mermaid diagram writing skill. Use when creating any scientific document, report, analysis, or visualization. Establishes text-based diagrams as the default documentation standard with full style guides (markdown + mermaid), 24 diagram type references, and 9 document templates.