The docking section of CASP2 is reviewed. Seven small molecule ligandprotein targets and one protein-protein target were available for predictions. Many of the small molecule ligand complexes involved serine proteases. Overall results for the small molecule targets were good, with at least one predi
Critical evaluation of the research docking program for the CASP2 challenge
β Scribed by Hart, Trevor N.; Ness, Steven R.; Read, Randy J.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 68 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-3585
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The binding positions of six small-molecule ligands in their complexes with target proteins were predicted using our Research docking program for the CASP2 challenge. Research uses a Monte Carlo procedure with pairwise energies and allows for the conformational searching of ligand torsional space. We were able to predict 2 of the 5 noncovalent complexes within 2 Γ root-mean-square (RMS) of the experimental structures as ranked by interaction energy or by a score calculated using our interaction evaluation program, Outrank. In addition, for 4 of the 5 noncovalent structures we found a docking within 2 Γ RMS of the experimental structure within the top 20 dockings as ranked by energy. The main limitation in our approach is in the ability of the energy function and Outrank to discriminate among the lowest energy dockings. On the other hand, our success in exploring the multidimensional docking space of position, orientation and conformation is encouraging. Pro-
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Several global optimization algorithms were applied to the problem of molecular docking: random walk and Metropolis Monte Carlo Simulated Annealing as references, and Stochastic Approximation with Smoothing (SAS), and Terminal Repeller Unconstrained Subenergy Tunneling (TRUST) as new methodologies.