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1.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(4): 2630-2639, 2021 Apr 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33779166

RESUMEN

We present a reliable and accurate solution to the induced fit docking problem for protein-ligand binding by combining ligand-based pharmacophore docking, rigid receptor docking, and protein structure prediction with explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations. This novel methodology in detailed retrospective and prospective testing succeeded to determine protein-ligand binding modes with a root-mean-square deviation within 2.5 Å in over 90% of cross-docking cases. We further demonstrate these predicted ligand-receptor structures were sufficiently accurate to prospectively enable predictive structure-based drug discovery for challenging targets, substantially expanding the domain of applicability for such methods.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Proteínas/química , Ligandos , Unión Proteica
2.
J Med Chem ; 59(9): 4364-84, 2016 05 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27054459

RESUMEN

We have developed a new methodology for protein-ligand docking and scoring, WScore, incorporating a flexible description of explicit water molecules. The locations and thermodynamics of the waters are derived from a WaterMap molecular dynamics simulation. The water structure is employed to provide an atomic level description of ligand and protein desolvation. WScore also contains a detailed model for localized ligand and protein strain energy and integrates an MM-GBSA scoring component with these terms to assess delocalized strain of the complex. Ensemble docking is used to take into account induced fit effects on the receptor conformation, and protein reorganization free energies are assigned via fitting to experimental data. The performance of the method is evaluated for pose prediction, rank ordering of self-docked complexes, and enrichment in virtual screening, using a large data set of PDB complexes and compared with the Glide SP and Glide XP models; significant improvements are obtained.


Asunto(s)
Receptores de Superficie Celular/química , Agua/química , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Ligandos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular
3.
J Comput Aided Mol Des ; 26(6): 787-99, 2012 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22576241

RESUMEN

Glide SP mode enrichment results for two preparations of the DUD dataset and native ligand docking RMSDs for two preparations of the Astex dataset are presented. Following a best-practices preparation scheme, an average RMSD of 1.140 Å for native ligand docking with Glide SP is computed. Following the same best-practices preparation scheme for the DUD dataset an average area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.80 and average early enrichment via the ROC (0.1 %) metric of 0.12 were observed. 74 and 56 % of the 39 best-practices prepared targets showed AUC over 0.7 and 0.8, respectively. Average AUC was greater than 0.7 for all best-practices protein families demonstrating consistent enrichment performance across a broad range of proteins and ligand chemotypes. In both Astex and DUD datasets, docking performance is significantly improved employing a best-practices preparation scheme over using minimally-prepared structures from the PDB. Enrichment results for WScore, a new scoring function and sampling methodology integrating WaterMap and Glide, are presented for four DUD targets, hivrt, hsp90, cdk2, and fxa. WScore performance in early enrichment is consistently strong and all systems examined show AUC > 0.9 and superior early enrichment to DUD best-practices Glide SP results.


Asunto(s)
Sitios de Unión , Ligandos , Proteínas/química , Programas Informáticos , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Bases de Datos de Proteínas , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica
4.
J Chem Inf Model ; 50(4): 534-46, 2010 Apr 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20373803

RESUMEN

We describe the methodology, parametrization, and application of a conformational search method, called ConfGen, designed to efficiently generate bioactive conformers. We define efficiency as the ability to generate a bioactive conformation within a small total number of conformations using a reasonable amount of computer time. The method combines physics-based force field calculations with empirically derived heuristics designed to achieve efficient searching and prioritization of the ligand's conformational space. While many parameter settings are supported, four modes spanning a range of speed and quality trades-offs are defined and characterized. The validation set used to test the method is composed of ligands from 667 crystal structures covering a broad array of target and ligand classes. With the fastest mode, ConfGen uses an average of 0.5 s per ligand and generates only 14.3 conformers per ligand, at least one of which lies within 2.0 A root-mean-squared deviation of the crystal structure for 96% of the ligands. The most computationally intensive mode raises this recovery rate to 99%, while taking 8 s per ligand. Combining multiple search modes to "fill-in" holes in the conformation space or energy minimizing using an all-atom force field each lead to improvements in the recovery rates at higher resolutions. Overall, ConfGen is at least as good as competing programs at high resolution and demonstrates higher efficiency at resolutions sufficient for many downstream applications, such as pharmacophore modeling.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional , Conformación Molecular , Evaluación Preclínica de Medicamentos , Ligandos , Modelos Moleculares , Programas Informáticos , Factores de Tiempo
5.
J Med Chem ; 49(21): 6177-96, 2006 Oct 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17034125

RESUMEN

A novel scoring function to estimate protein-ligand binding affinities has been developed and implemented as the Glide 4.0 XP scoring function and docking protocol. In addition to unique water desolvation energy terms, protein-ligand structural motifs leading to enhanced binding affinity are included: (1) hydrophobic enclosure where groups of lipophilic ligand atoms are enclosed on opposite faces by lipophilic protein atoms, (2) neutral-neutral single or correlated hydrogen bonds in a hydrophobically enclosed environment, and (3) five categories of charged-charged hydrogen bonds. The XP scoring function and docking protocol have been developed to reproduce experimental binding affinities for a set of 198 complexes (RMSDs of 2.26 and 1.73 kcal/mol over all and well-docked ligands, respectively) and to yield quality enrichments for a set of fifteen screens of pharmaceutical importance. Enrichment results demonstrate the importance of the novel XP molecular recognition and water scoring in separating active and inactive ligands and avoiding false positives.


Asunto(s)
Ligandos , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química , Relación Estructura-Actividad Cuantitativa , Algoritmos , Sitios de Unión , Entropía , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Metales/química , Agua/química
6.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 1(2): 248-54, 2005 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26641295

RESUMEN

We present a methodology for computing the binding energy of molecular dimers based on extrapolation of pseudospectral local second-order Moller-Plesset (MP2), or PS-LMP2, energies to the basis set limit. The extrapolation protocol is based on carrying out PS-LMP2 calculations with the Dunning cc-pVTZ (-f) and cc-pVQZ (-g) basis sets and then using a simple two-parameter function to compute the final basis set limit results. The function is parametrized to ultralarge basis set MP2 calculations for 5 molecular pairs taken from the literature and then tested by calculating results for a set of formamide dimers for which such calculations have also been carried out. The results agree to within ca. 0.2 kcal/mol with the conventional MP2 large basis set calculations. A specialized, but relatively simple, protocol is described for eliminating noise due to overcompleteness of the basis set. Timing results are presented for the LMP2 calculations, and comparisons are made with the LMP2 methodology of the QChem program. CPU time required by each of the methods scales as N(3), where N is the number of the basis functions, with the PS-LMP2 approach displaying a 2- to 3-fold advantage in the prefactor. We also discuss one set of test cases for which the PS-LMP2 results disagree with those obtained from an alternative type of MP2 calculation, N-methyl acetamide (NMA) dimers, and show that the results for liquid-state simulations using polarizable parameters derived by fitting to the PS-LMP2 binding energies appear to produce better results when compared with experimental data. The convergence issues associated with the alternative MP2 formulation remain to be investigated.

7.
J Med Chem ; 47(7): 1739-49, 2004 Mar 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15027865

RESUMEN

Unlike other methods for docking ligands to the rigid 3D structure of a known protein receptor, Glide approximates a complete systematic search of the conformational, orientational, and positional space of the docked ligand. In this search, an initial rough positioning and scoring phase that dramatically narrows the search space is followed by torsionally flexible energy optimization on an OPLS-AA nonbonded potential grid for a few hundred surviving candidate poses. The very best candidates are further refined via a Monte Carlo sampling of pose conformation; in some cases, this is crucial to obtaining an accurate docked pose. Selection of the best docked pose uses a model energy function that combines empirical and force-field-based terms. Docking accuracy is assessed by redocking ligands from 282 cocrystallized PDB complexes starting from conformationally optimized ligand geometries that bear no memory of the correctly docked pose. Errors in geometry for the top-ranked pose are less than 1 A in nearly half of the cases and are greater than 2 A in only about one-third of them. Comparisons to published data on rms deviations show that Glide is nearly twice as accurate as GOLD and more than twice as accurate as FlexX for ligands having up to 20 rotatable bonds. Glide is also found to be more accurate than the recently described Surflex method.


Asunto(s)
Diseño de Fármacos , Ligandos , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química , Sitios de Unión , Conformación Molecular , Estructura Molecular , Método de Montecarlo , Conformación Proteica , Relación Estructura-Actividad Cuantitativa , Termodinámica , Timidina Quinasa/química
8.
J Med Chem ; 47(7): 1750-9, 2004 Mar 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15027866

RESUMEN

Glide's ability to identify active compounds in a database screen is characterized by applying Glide to a diverse set of nine protein receptors. In many cases, two, or even three, protein sites are employed to probe the sensitivity of the results to the site geometry. To make the database screens as realistic as possible, the screens use sets of "druglike" decoy ligands that have been selected to be representative of what we believe is likely to be found in the compound collection of a pharmaceutical or biotechnology company. Results are presented for releases 1.8, 2.0, and 2.5 of Glide. The comparisons show that average measures for both "early" and "global" enrichment for Glide 2.5 are 3 times higher than for Glide 1.8 and more than 2 times higher than for Glide 2.0 because of better results for the least well-handled screens. This improvement in enrichment stems largely from the better balance of the more widely parametrized GlideScore 2.5 function and the inclusion of terms that penalize ligand-protein interactions that violate established principles of physical chemistry, particularly as it concerns the exposure to solvent of charged protein and ligand groups. Comparisons to results for the thymidine kinase and estrogen receptors published by Rognan and co-workers (J. Med. Chem. 2000, 43, 4759-4767) show that Glide 2.5 performs better than GOLD 1.1, FlexX 1.8, or DOCK 4.01.


Asunto(s)
Bases de Datos Factuales , Diseño de Fármacos , Ligandos , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química , Sitios de Unión , Conformación Molecular , Estructura Molecular , Conformación Proteica , Relación Estructura-Actividad Cuantitativa
9.
J Comput Chem ; 23(16): 1515-31, 2002 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12395421

RESUMEN

We present results of developing a methodology suitable for producing molecular mechanics force fields with explicit treatment of electrostatic polarization for proteins and other molecular system of biological interest. The technique allows simulation of realistic-size systems. Employing high-level ab initio data as a target for fitting allows us to avoid the problem of the lack of detailed experimental data. Using the fast and reliable quantum mechanical methods supplies robust fitting data for the resulting parameter sets. As a result, gas-phase many-body effects for dipeptides are captured within the average RMSD of 0.22 kcal/mol from their ab initio values, and conformational energies for the di- and tetrapeptides are reproduced within the average RMSD of 0.43 kcal/mol from their quantum mechanical counterparts. The latter is achieved in part because of application of a novel torsional fitting technique recently developed in our group, which has already been used to greatly improve accuracy of the peptide conformational equilibrium prediction with the OPLS-AA force field.1 Finally, we have employed the newly developed first-generation model in computing gas-phase conformations of real proteins, as well as in molecular dynamics studies of the systems. The results show that, although the overall accuracy is no better than what can be achieved with a fixed-charges model, the methodology produces robust results, permits reasonably low computational cost, and avoids other computational problems typical for polarizable force fields. It can be considered as a solid basis for building a more accurate and complete second-generation model.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Algoritmos , Aminoácidos/química , Fenómenos Químicos , Química Física , Simulación por Computador , Electroquímica , Modelos Moleculares , Péptidos/química , Conformación Proteica , Teoría Cuántica , Solventes
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