11 research outputs found

    Gypsum-DL: an open-source program for preparing small-molecule libraries for structure-based virtual screening

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    Computational techniques such as structure-based virtual screening require carefully prepared 3D models of potential small-molecule ligands. Though powerful, existing commercial programs for virtual-library preparation have restrictive and/or expensive licenses. Freely available alternatives, though often effective, do not fully account for all possible ionization, tautomeric, and ring-conformational variants. We here present Gypsum-DL, a free, robust open-source program that addresses these challenges. As input, Gypsum-DL accepts virtual compound libraries in SMILES or flat SDF formats. For each molecule in the virtual library, it enumerates appropriate ionization, tautomeric, chiral, cis/trans isomeric, and ring-conformational forms. As output, Gypsum-DL produces an SDF file containing each molecular form, with 3D coordinates assigned. To demonstrate its utility, we processed 1558 molecules taken from the NCI Diversity Set VI and 56,608 molecules taken from a Distributed Drug Discovery (D3) combinatorial virtual library. We also used 4463 high-quality protein-ligand complexes from the PDBBind database to show that Gypsum-DL processing can improve virtual-screening pose prediction. Gypsum-DL is available free of charge under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0

    Technology and the Era of the Mass Army

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    Dimorphite-DL: an open-source program for enumerating the ionization states of drug-like small molecules

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    Abstract Small-molecule protonation can promote or discourage protein binding by altering hydrogen-bond, electrostatic, and van-der-Waals interactions. To improve virtual-screen pose and affinity predictions, researchers must account for all major small-molecule ionization states. But existing programs for calculating these states have notable limitations such as high cost, restrictive licenses, slow execution times, and poor modularity. Here, we present dimorphite-DL 1.0, a fast, accurate, accessible, and modular open-source program for enumerating small-molecule ionization states. Dimorphite-DL uses a straightforward empirical algorithm that leverages substructure searching and draws on a database of experimentally characterized ionizable molecules. We have tested dimorphite-DL using several versions of Python and RDKit on all major operating systems. We release it under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0. A copy is available free of charge from http://durrantlab.com/dimorphite-dl/

    MutantHuntWGS: A Pipeline for Identifying Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mutations

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    MutantHuntWGS is a user-friendly pipeline for analyzing Saccharomyces cerevisiae whole-genome sequencing data. It uses available open-source programs to: (1) perform sequence alignments for paired and single-end reads, (2) call variants, and (3) predict variant effect and severity. MutantHuntWGS outputs a shortlist of variants while also enabling access to all intermediate files. To demonstrate its utility, we use MutantHuntWGS to assess multiple published datasets; in all cases, it detects the same causal variants reported in the literature. To encourage broad adoption and promote reproducibility, we distribute a containerized version of the MutantHuntWGS pipeline that allows users to install and analyze data with only two commands. The MutantHuntWGS software and documentation can be downloaded free of charge from https://github.com/mae92/MutantHuntWGS

    Structural basis of mitochondrial transcription.

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    The mitochondrial genome is transcribed by a single-subunit DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (mtRNAP) and its auxiliary factors. Structural studies have elucidated how mtRNAP cooperates with its dedicated transcription factors to direct RNA synthesis: initiation factors TFAM and TFB2M assist in promoter-DNA binding and opening by mtRNAP while the elongation factor TEFM increases polymerase processivity to the levels required for synthesis of long polycistronic mtRNA transcripts. Here, we review the emerging body of structural and functional studies of human mitochondrial transcription, provide a molecular movie that can be used for teaching purposes and discuss the open questions to guide future directions of investigation
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