TY - JOUR
T1 - On the effects of permuted input on conformational sampling of drug-like molecules
T2 - An evaluation of stochastic proximity embedding
AU - Agrafiotis, Dimitris K.
AU - Bandyopadhyay, Deepak
AU - Carta, Giorgio
AU - Knox, Andrew J.S.
AU - Lloyd, David G.
PY - 2007/8
Y1 - 2007/8
N2 - Conformational sampling is a problem of central importance in computer-aided drug design. A good conformational search method must not exhibit any intrinsic bias, and must provide confidence that important regions of conformational space are not missed during the search. A recent study by Carta et al. showed that this is not always the case, and that several popular conformational search methods, such as Omega, are very sensitive to the relative ordering of atoms and bonds in the connection table. Here, we examine the performance of a newer method known as stochastic proximity embedding, or SPE, using five diverse bioactive ligands extracted from the PDB. Our results confirm that the conformational ensembles produced by SPE using different permuted inputs are statistically indistinguishable, and well within the range of variability that would be expected from the stochastic nature of the method itself. This, along with the results of a more comprehensive comparative study (Agrafiotis et al., J. Chem. Info. Model, 2007, in press), provides further evidence that SPE is one of the most robust and competitive conformational search methods described to date.
AB - Conformational sampling is a problem of central importance in computer-aided drug design. A good conformational search method must not exhibit any intrinsic bias, and must provide confidence that important regions of conformational space are not missed during the search. A recent study by Carta et al. showed that this is not always the case, and that several popular conformational search methods, such as Omega, are very sensitive to the relative ordering of atoms and bonds in the connection table. Here, we examine the performance of a newer method known as stochastic proximity embedding, or SPE, using five diverse bioactive ligands extracted from the PDB. Our results confirm that the conformational ensembles produced by SPE using different permuted inputs are statistically indistinguishable, and well within the range of variability that would be expected from the stochastic nature of the method itself. This, along with the results of a more comprehensive comparative study (Agrafiotis et al., J. Chem. Info. Model, 2007, in press), provides further evidence that SPE is one of the most robust and competitive conformational search methods described to date.
KW - Bioactive conformation
KW - Boosting
KW - Conformational analysis
KW - Conformational sampling
KW - Distance geometry
KW - SPE
KW - Stochastic proximity embedding
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/34547798995
U2 - 10.1111/j.1747-0285.2007.00538.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1747-0285.2007.00538.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 17683373
AN - SCOPUS:34547798995
SN - 1747-0277
VL - 70
SP - 123
EP - 133
JO - Chemical Biology and Drug Design
JF - Chemical Biology and Drug Design
IS - 2
ER -