DocumentCode
599227
Title
Auto dock-based incremental docking protocol to improve docking of large ligands
Author
Dhanik, A. ; McMurray, J.S. ; Kavraki, Lydia
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
4-7 Oct. 2012
Firstpage
48
Lastpage
55
Abstract
It is well known that computer-aided docking of large ligands, with many rotatable bonds, is extremely difficult. AutoDock is a widely used docking program that can dock small ligands, with upto 5 or 6 rotatable bonds, accurately and quickly. Docking of larger ligands, however, is not very accurate and is computationally expensive. In this paper we present an AutoDock-based incremental docking protocol which docks a large ligand to its target protein in increments. A fragment of the large ligand is first chosen and then docked. Best docked conformations are incrementally grown and docked again, and this process is repeated until all the atoms of the ligand are docked. Each docking operation is performed using AutoDock. However, in each docking operation only a small number of rotatable bonds are allowed to rotate. We did a systematic docking study on a dataset of 73 protein-ligand complexes derived from the core set of PDBbind database. The number of rotatable bonds in the ligands vary from 7 to 30. Docking experiments were done to evaluate the docking performance of the incremental protocol in comparison to AutoDock´s standard protocol. Results from the study show that, on average over the dataset, docking of large ligands using our incremental protocol is 23-fold computationally faster than docking using AutoDock´s standard protocol and also has comparable or better accuracy. We propose that, for docking large ligands, our incremental protocol can be used as an alternative to AutoDock´s standard protocol.
Keywords
biological techniques; biology computing; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; proteins; AutoDock based incremental docking protocol; PDBbind database; computer aided large ligand docking; docked conformations; docking experiments; docking program; ligand fragment; protein-ligand complexes; rotatable bonds; Accuracy; Databases; Hydrogen; Proteins; Protocols; Space exploration; Standards; AutoDock; PDBbind; computer-aided docking; docking programs; drug design; drug discovery; fast docking; high-dimensional conformation spaces; large flexible ligands; protein-ligand complexes;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Workshops (BIBMW), 2012 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-2746-6
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4673-2744-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/BIBMW.2012.6470370
Filename
6470370
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