Assessing protein–ligand interaction scoring functions with the CASF-2013 benchmark

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 666-680 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Li ◽  
Minyi Su ◽  
Zhihai Liu ◽  
Jie Li ◽  
Jie Liu ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
pp. 1072-1091
Author(s):  
Ali HajiEbrahimi ◽  
Hamidreza Ghafouri ◽  
Mohsen Ranjbar ◽  
Amirhossein Sakhteman

A most challenging part in docking-based virtual screening is the scoring functions implemented in various docking programs in order to evaluate different poses of the ligands inside the binding cavity of the receptor. Precise and trustable measurement of ligand-protein affinity for Structure-Based Virtual Screening (SB-VS) is therefore, an outstanding problem in docking studies. Empirical post-docking filters can be helpful as a way to provide various types of structure-activity information. Different types of interaction have been presented between the ligands and the receptor so far. Based on the diversity and importance of PLIF methods, this chapter will focus on the comparison of different protocols. The advantages and disadvantages of all methods will be discussed explicitly in this chapter as well as future sights for further progress in this field. Different classifications approaches for the protein-ligand interaction fingerprints were also discussed in this chapter.


Author(s):  
Guo-Li Xiong ◽  
Wen-Ling Ye ◽  
Chao Shen ◽  
Ai-Ping Lu ◽  
Ting-Jun Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Scoring functions (SFs) based on complex machine learning (ML) algorithms have gradually emerged as a promising alternative to overcome the weaknesses of classical SFs. However, extensive efforts have been devoted to the development of SFs based on new protein–ligand interaction representations and advanced alternative ML algorithms instead of the energy components obtained by the decomposition of existing SFs. Here, we propose a new method named energy auxiliary terms learning (EATL), in which the scoring components are extracted and used as the input for the development of three levels of ML SFs including EATL SFs, docking-EATL SFs and comprehensive SFs with ascending VS performance. The EATL approach not only outperforms classical SFs for the absolute performance (ROC) and initial enrichment (BEDROC) but also yields comparable performance compared with other advanced ML-based methods on the diverse subset of Directory of Useful Decoys: Enhanced (DUD-E). The test on the relatively unbiased actives as decoys (AD) dataset also proved the effectiveness of EATL. Furthermore, the idea of learning from SF components to yield improved screening power can also be extended to other docking programs and SFs available.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Radifar ◽  
Nunung Yuniarti ◽  
Enade Perdana Istyastono

Identification of Protein-Ligand Interaction Fingerprints (PLIF) has been performed as the rescoring strategy to identify the best pose for the docked poses of indomethacin-(R)-α-ethyl-etanolamide (IMM) in the binding site of cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1) from simulations using PLANTS molecular docking software version 1.2 (PLANTS1.2). Instead of using the scoring functions included in the docking software, the strategy presented in this article used external software called PyPLIF that could identify the interactions of the ligand to the amino acid residues in the binding pocket and presents them as binary bitstrings, which subsequently were compared to the interaction bitstrings of the co-crystal ligand pose. The results show that PyPLIF-assisted redocking strategy could select the correct pose much better compared to the pose selection without rescoring. Out of 1000 iterative attempts, PyPLIF-assisted redocking simulations could identify 971 correct poses (more than 95%), while the redocking simulations without PyPLIF could only identify 500 correct poses (50%).These works have also provided us with the initial step of the construction of a valid Structure-Based Virtual Screening (SBVS) protocol to identify COX-1 inhibitors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 302-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihai Liu ◽  
Minyi Su ◽  
Li Han ◽  
Jie Liu ◽  
Qifan Yang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ali HajiEbrahimi ◽  
Hamidreza Ghafouri ◽  
Mohsen Ranjbar ◽  
Amirhossein Sakhteman

A most challenging part in docking-based virtual screening is the scoring functions implemented in various docking programs in order to evaluate different poses of the ligands inside the binding cavity of the receptor. Precise and trustable measurement of ligand-protein affinity for Structure-Based Virtual Screening (SB-VS) is therefore, an outstanding problem in docking studies. Empirical post-docking filters can be helpful as a way to provide various types of structure-activity information. Different types of interaction have been presented between the ligands and the receptor so far. Based on the diversity and importance of PLIF methods, this chapter will focus on the comparison of different protocols. The advantages and disadvantages of all methods will be discussed explicitly in this chapter as well as future sights for further progress in this field. Different classifications approaches for the protein-ligand interaction fingerprints were also discussed in this chapter.


Author(s):  
Xiaodong Pang ◽  
Linxiang Zhou ◽  
Lily Zhang ◽  
Lina Xu ◽  
Xinyi Zhang

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Surendra Kumar ◽  
Mi-hyun Kim

AbstractIn drug discovery, rapid and accurate prediction of protein–ligand binding affinities is a pivotal task for lead optimization with acceptable on-target potency as well as pharmacological efficacy. Furthermore, researchers hope for a high correlation between docking score and pose with key interactive residues, although scoring functions as free energy surrogates of protein–ligand complexes have failed to provide collinearity. Recently, various machine learning or deep learning methods have been proposed to overcome the drawbacks of scoring functions. Despite being highly accurate, their featurization process is complex and the meaning of the embedded features cannot directly be interpreted by human recognition without an additional feature analysis. Here, we propose SMPLIP-Score (Substructural Molecular and Protein–Ligand Interaction Pattern Score), a direct interpretable predictor of absolute binding affinity. Our simple featurization embeds the interaction fingerprint pattern on the ligand-binding site environment and molecular fragments of ligands into an input vectorized matrix for learning layers (random forest or deep neural network). Despite their less complex features than other state-of-the-art models, SMPLIP-Score achieved comparable performance, a Pearson’s correlation coefficient up to 0.80, and a root mean square error up to 1.18 in pK units with several benchmark datasets (PDBbind v.2015, Astex Diverse Set, CSAR NRC HiQ, FEP, PDBbind NMR, and CASF-2016). For this model, generality, predictive power, ranking power, and robustness were examined using direct interpretation of feature matrices for specific targets.


Author(s):  
Lennart Gundelach ◽  
Christofer S Tautermann ◽  
Thomas Fox ◽  
Chris-Kriton Skylaris

The accurate prediction of protein-ligand binding free energies with tractable computational methods has the potential to revolutionize drug discovery. Modeling the protein-ligand interaction at a quantum mechanical level, instead of...


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