| Literature DB >> 31691919 |
Léa El Khoury1, Diogo Santos-Martins2, Sukanya Sasmal1, Jérôme Eberhardt2, Giulia Bianco2, Francesca Alessandra Ambrosio2,3, Leonardo Solis-Vasquez4, Andreas Koch4, Stefano Forli5, David L Mobley6,7.
Abstract
Molecular docking has been successfully used in computer-aided molecular design projects for the identification of ligand poses within protein binding sites. However, relying on docking scores to rank different ligands with respect to their experimental affinities might not be sufficient. It is believed that the binding scores calculated using molecular mechanics combined with the Poisson-Boltzman surface area (MM-PBSA) or generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA) can predict binding affinities more accurately. In this perspective, we decided to take part in Stage 2 of the Drug Design Data Resource (D3R) Grand Challenge 4 (GC4) to compare the performance of a quick scoring function, AutoDock4, to that of MM-GBSA in predicting the binding affinities of a set of [Formula: see text]-Amyloid Cleaving Enzyme 1 (BACE-1) ligands. Our results show that re-scoring docking poses using MM-GBSA did not improve the correlation with experimental affinities. We further did a retrospective analysis of the results and found that our MM-GBSA protocol is sensitive to details in the protein-ligand system: (i) neutral ligands are more adapted to MM-GBSA calculations than charged ligands, (ii) predicted binding affinities depend on the initial conformation of the BACE-1 receptor, (iii) protonating the aspartyl dyad of BACE-1 correctly results in more accurate binding affinity predictions.Entities:
Keywords: AutoDock; Docking; MM-GBSA; Scoring functions
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31691919 PMCID: PMC7027993 DOI: 10.1007/s10822-019-00240-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comput Aided Mol Des ISSN: 0920-654X Impact factor: 3.686