| Literature DB >> 33511845 |
Daisuke Takaya1, Chiduru Watanabe1,2, Shunpei Nagase1, Kikuko Kamisaka1, Yoshio Okiyama1,3, Hirotomo Moriwaki1, Hitomi Yuki1, Tomohiro Sato1, Noriyuki Kurita4, Yoichiro Yagi5, Tatsuya Takagi6, Norihito Kawashita7, Kenichiro Takaba8, Tomonaga Ozawa9, Midori Takimoto-Kamimura10, Shigenori Tanaka11, Kaori Fukuzawa12,13, Teruki Honma1.
Abstract
We developed the world's first web-based public database for the storage, management, and sharing of fragment molecular orbital (FMO) calculation data sets describing the complex interactions between biomacromolecules, named FMO Database (https://drugdesign.riken.jp/FMODB/). Each entry in the database contains relevant background information on how the data was compiled as well as the total energy of each molecular system and interfragment interaction energy (IFIE) and pair interaction energy decomposition analysis (PIEDA) values. Currently, the database contains more than 13 600 FMO calculation data sets, and a comprehensive search function implemented at the front-end. The procedure for selecting target proteins, preprocessing the experimental structures, construction of the database, and details of the database front-end were described. Then, we demonstrated a use of the FMODB by comparing IFIE value distributions of hydrogen bond, ion-pair, and XH/π interactions obtained by FMO method to those by molecular mechanics approach. From the comparison, the statistical analysis of the data provided standard reference values for the three types of interactions that will be useful for determining whether each interaction in a given system is relatively strong or weak compared to the interactions contained within the data in the FMODB. In the final part, we demonstrate the use of the database to examine the contribution of halogen atoms to the binding affinity between human cathepsin L and its inhibitors. We found that the electrostatic term derived by PIEDA greatly correlated with the binding affinities of the halogen containing cathepsin L inhibitors, indicating the importance of QM calculation for quantitative analysis of halogen interactions. Thus, the FMO calculation data in FMODB will be useful for conducting statistical analyses to drug discovery, for conducting molecular recognition studies in structural biology, and for other studies involving quantum mechanics-based interactions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33511845 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c01062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Inf Model ISSN: 1549-9596 Impact factor: 4.956