binding-site assessment by virtual fragment screening结合位点评估虚拟片段筛选.pdf
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Binding-Site Assessment by Virtual Fragment Screening
Niu Huang1,2*, Matthew P. Jacobson2
1 National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing, Beijing, China, 2 Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco,
California, United States of America
Abstract
The accurate prediction of protein druggability (propensity to bind high-affinity drug-like small molecules) would greatly
benefit the fields of chemical genomics and drug discovery. We have developed a novel approach to quantitatively assess
protein druggability by computationally screening a fragment-like compound library. In analogy to NMR-based fragment
screening, we dock ,11000 fragments against a given binding site and compute a computational hit rate based on the
fraction of molecules that exceed an empirically chosen score cutoff. We perform a large-scale evaluation of the approach
on four datasets, totaling 152 binding sites. We demonstrate that computed hit rates correlate with hit rates measured
experimentally in a previously published NMR-based screening method. Secondly, we show that the in silico fragment
screening method can be used to distinguish known druggable and non-druggable targets, including both enzymes and
protein-protein interaction sites. Finally, we explore the sensitivity of the results to different receptor conformations,
including flexible protein-protein interaction sites. Besides its original aim to assess druggability of different protein targets,
this method could be used to identifying druggable conformations of flexible binding site for lead discovery, and
suggesting strategies for growing or joining initial fragment hits
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