791 research outputs found

    XML in Motion from Genome to Drug

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    Information technology (IT) has emerged as a central to the solution of contemporary genomics and drug discovery problems. Researchers involved in genomics, proteomics, transcriptional profiling, high throughput structure determination, and in other sub-disciplines of bioinformatics have direct impact on this IT revolution. As the full genome sequences of many species, data from structural genomics, micro-arrays, and proteomics became available, integration of these data to a common platform require sophisticated bioinformatics tools. Organizing these data into knowledgeable databases and developing appropriate software tools for analyzing the same are going to be major challenges. XML (eXtensible Markup Language) forms the backbone of biological data representation and exchange over the internet, enabling researchers to aggregate data from various heterogeneous data resources. The present article covers a comprehensive idea of the integration of XML on particular type of biological databases mainly dealing with sequence-structure-function relationship and its application towards drug discovery. This e-medical science approach should be applied to other scientific domains and the latest trend in semantic web applications is also highlighted

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

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    Chemoinformatic Approach: The Case of Natural Products of Panama

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    Chemoinformatic analysis was used to characterize a compound database of natural products from Panama and other reference collections. Data mining allowed to compare drug-likeness properties with public and commercial software and to achieve a statistical analysis of the physicochemical properties. Visualization of the chemical space in 3D indicates a high structural similarity. Molecular flexibility and complexity were evaluated using 2D descriptors, whereas the molecular scaffold was obtained using the Murcko method, and these showed few differences between the explored data set. In this chapter, we also present and discuss an example of the application of the chemoinformatic approach using the concept of modeling the activity landscape to study the structure-activity relationships (SARs) of compounds with activity against Plasmodium falciparum

    Lipophilicity in drug design: an overview of lipophilicity descriptors in 3D-QSAR studies

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    The pharmacophore concept is a fundamental cornerstone in drug discovery, playing a critical role in determining the success of in silico techniques, such as virtual screening and 3D-QSAR studies. The reliability of these approaches is influenced by the quality of the physicochemical descriptors used to characterize the chemical entities. In this context, a pivotal role is exerted by lipophilicity, which is a major contribution to host-guest interaction and ligand binding affinity. Several approaches have been undertaken to account for the descriptive and predictive capabilities of lipophilicity in 3D-QSAR modeling. Recent efforts encode the use of quantum mechanical-based descriptors derived from continuum solvation models, which open novel avenues for gaining insight into structure-activity relationships studies
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