4,289 research outputs found

    Evaluation of a novel virtual screening strategy using receptor decoy binding sites

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    Virtual screening is used in biomedical research to predict the binding affinity of a large set of small organic molecules to protein receptor targets. This report shows the development and evaluation of a novel yet straightforward attempt to improve this ranking in receptor-based molecular docking using a receptor-decoy strategy. This strategy includes defining a decoy binding site on the receptor and adjusting the ranking of the true binding-site virtual screen based on the decoy-site screen. The results show that by docking against a receptor-decoy site with Autodock Vina, improved Receiver Operator Characteristic Enrichment (ROCE) was achieved for 5 out of fifteen receptor targets investigated, when up to 15 % of a decoy site rank list was considered. No improved enrichment was seen for 7 targets, while for 3 targets the ROCE was reduced. The extent to which this strategy can effectively improve ligand prediction is dependent on the target receptor investigated

    Advances and Challenges in Protein-Ligand Docking

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    Molecular docking is a widely-used computational tool for the study of molecular recognition, which aims to predict the binding mode and binding affinity of a complex formed by two or more constituent molecules with known structures. An important type of molecular docking is protein-ligand docking because of its therapeutic applications in modern structure-based drug design. Here, we review the recent advances of protein flexibility, ligand sampling, and scoring functions—the three important aspects in protein-ligand docking. Challenges and possible future directions are discussed in the Conclusion

    Consensus virtual screening approaches to predict protein ligands

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    In order to exploit the advantages of receptor-based virtual screening, namely time/cost saving and specificity, it is important to rely on algorithms that predict a high number of active ligands at the top ranks of a small molecule database. Towards that goal consensus methods combining the results of several docking algorithms were developed and compared against the individual algorithms. Furthermore, a recently proposed rescoring method based on drug efficiency indices was evaluated. Among AutoDock Vina 1.0, AutoDock 4.2 and GemDock, AutoDock Vina was the best performing single method in predicting high affinity ligands from a database of known ligands and decoys. The rescoring of predicted binding energies with the water/butanol partition coeffcient did not lead to an improvement averaged over all receptor targets. Various consensus algorithms were investigated and a simple combination of AutoDock and AutoDock Vina results gave the most consistent performance that showed early enrichment of known ligands for all receptor targets investigated. In case a number ligands is known for a specific target, every method proposed in this study should be evaluated

    11th German Conference on Chemoinformatics (GCC 2015) : Fulda, Germany. 8-10 November 2015.

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    Computational approaches to virtual screening in human central nervous system therapeutic targets

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    In the past several years of drug design, advanced high-throughput synthetic and analytical chemical technologies are continuously producing a large number of compounds. These large collections of chemical structures have resulted in many public and commercial molecular databases. Thus, the availability of larger data sets provided the opportunity for developing new knowledge mining or virtual screening (VS) methods. Therefore, this research work is motivated by the fact that one of the main interests in the modern drug discovery process is the development of new methods to predict compounds with large therapeutic profiles (multi-targeting activity), which is essential for the discovery of novel drug candidates against complex multifactorial diseases like central nervous system (CNS) disorders. This work aims to advance VS approaches by providing a deeper understanding of the relationship between chemical structure and pharmacological properties and design new fast and robust tools for drug designing against different targets/pathways. To accomplish the defined goals, the first challenge is dealing with big data set of diverse molecular structures to derive a correlation between structures and activity. However, an extendable and a customizable fully automated in-silico Quantitative-Structure Activity Relationship (QSAR) modeling framework was developed in the first phase of this work. QSAR models are computationally fast and powerful tool to screen huge databases of compounds to determine the biological properties of chemical molecules based on their chemical structure. The generated framework reliably implemented a full QSAR modeling pipeline from data preparation to model building and validation. The main distinctive features of the designed framework include a)efficient data curation b) prior estimation of data modelability and, c)an-optimized variable selection methodology that was able to identify the most biologically relevant features responsible for compound activity. Since the underlying principle in QSAR modeling is the assumption that the structures of molecules are mainly responsible for their pharmacological activity, the accuracy of different structural representation approaches to decode molecular structural information largely influence model predictability. However, to find the best approach in QSAR modeling, a comparative analysis of two main categories of molecular representations that included descriptor-based (vector space) and distance-based (metric space) methods was carried out. Results obtained from five QSAR data sets showed that distance-based method was superior to capture the more relevant structural elements for the accurate characterization of molecular properties in highly diverse data sets (remote chemical space regions). This finding further assisted to the development of a novel tool for molecular space visualization to increase the understanding of structure-activity relationships (SAR) in drug discovery projects by exploring the diversity of large heterogeneous chemical data. In the proposed visual approach, four nonlinear DR methods were tested to represent molecules lower dimensionality (2D projected space) on which a non-parametric 2D kernel density estimation (KDE) was applied to map the most likely activity regions (activity surfaces). The analysis of the produced probabilistic surface of molecular activities (PSMAs) from the four datasets showed that these maps have both descriptive and predictive power, thus can be used as a spatial classification model, a tool to perform VS using only structural similarity of molecules. The above QSAR modeling approach was complemented with molecular docking, an approach that predicts the best mode of drug-target interaction. Both approaches were integrated to develop a rational and re-usable polypharmacology-based VS pipeline with improved hits identification rate. For the validation of the developed pipeline, a dual-targeting drug designing model against Parkinson’s disease (PD) was derived to identify novel inhibitors for improving the motor functions of PD patients by enhancing the bioavailability of dopamine and avoiding neurotoxicity. The proposed approach can easily be extended to more complex multi-targeting disease models containing several targets and anti/offtargets to achieve increased efficacy and reduced toxicity in multifactorial diseases like CNS disorders and cancer. This thesis addresses several issues of cheminformatics methods (e.g., molecular structures representation, machine learning, and molecular similarity analysis) to improve and design new computational approaches used in chemical data mining. Moreover, an integrative drug-designing pipeline is designed to improve polypharmacology-based VS approach. This presented methodology can identify the most promising multi-targeting candidates for experimental validation of drug-targets network at the systems biology level in the drug discovery process

    Designing algorithms to aid discovery by chemical robots

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    Recently, automated robotic systems have become very efficient, thanks to improved coupling between sensor systems and algorithms, of which the latter have been gaining significance thanks to the increase in computing power over the past few decades. However, intelligent automated chemistry platforms for discovery orientated tasks need to be able to cope with the unknown, which is a profoundly hard problem. In this Outlook, we describe how recent advances in the design and application of algorithms, coupled with the increased amount of chemical data available, and automation and control systems may allow more productive chemical research and the development of chemical robots able to target discovery. This is shown through examples of workflow and data processing with automation and control, and through the use of both well-used and cutting-edge algorithms illustrated using recent studies in chemistry. Finally, several algorithms are presented in relation to chemical robots and chemical intelligence for knowledge discovery

    Software for molecular docking: a review

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    Publshed ArticleMolecular docking methodology explores the behavior of small molecules in the binding site of a target protein. As more protein structures are determined experimentally using X-ray crystallography or nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, molecular docking is increasingly used as a tool in drug discovery. Docking against homologymodeled targets also becomes possible for proteins whose structures are not known. With the docking strategies, the druggability of the compounds and their specificity against a particular target can be calculated for further lead optimization processes. Molecular docking programs perform a search algorithm in which the conformation of the ligand is evaluated recursively until the convergence to the minimum energy is reached. Finally, an affinity scoring function, ΔG [U total in kcal/mol], is employed to rank the candidate poses as the sum of the electrostatic and van der Waals energies. The driving forces for these specific interactions in biological systems aim toward complementarities between the shape and electrostatics of the binding site surfaces and the ligand or substrate
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