Abstract

Accurately predicting how a small molecule binds to its target protein is an essential requirement for structure-based drug design (SBDD) efforts. In structurally enabled medicinal chemistry programs, binding pose prediction is often applied to ligands after a related compound's crystal structure bound to the target protein has been solved. In this article, we present an automated pose prediction protocol that makes extensive use of existing X-ray ligand information. It uses spatial restraints during docking based on maximum common substructure (MCS) overlap between candidate molecule and existing X-ray coordinates of the related compound. For a validation data set of 8784 docking runs, our protocol's pose prediction accuracy (80-82%) is almost two times higher than that of one unbiased docking method software (43%). To demonstrate the utility of this protocol in a project setting, we show its application in a chronological manner for a number of internal drug discovery efforts. The accuracy and applicability of this algorithm (>70% of cases) to medicinal chemistry efforts make this the approach of choice for pose prediction in lead optimization programs.

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