Abstract
Identification of chemical compounds with specific biological activities is an important step in both chemical biology and drug discovery. When the structure of the intended target is available, one approach is to use molecular docking programs to assess the chemical complementarity of small molecules with the target; such calculations provide a qualitative measure of affinity that can be used in virtual screening (VS) to rank order a list of compounds according to their potential to be active. rDock is a molecular docking program developed at Vernalis for high-throughput VS (HTVS) applications. Evolved from RiboDock, the program can be used against proteins and nucleic acids, is designed to be computationally very efficient and allows the user to incorporate additional constraints and information as a bias to guide docking. This article provides an overview of the program structure and features and compares rDock to two reference programs, AutoDock Vina (open source) and Schrödinger's Glide (commercial). In terms of computational speed for VS, rDock is faster than Vina and comparable to Glide. For binding mode prediction, rDock and Vina are superior to Glide. The VS performance of rDock is significantly better than Vina, but inferior to Glide for most systems unless pharmacophore constraints are used; in that case rDock and Glide are of equal performance. The program is released under the Lesser General Public License and is freely available for download, together with the manuals, example files and the complete test sets, at http://rdock.sourceforge.net/
Highlights
The discovery of small molecules with biological activities is important to probe biological mechanism in chemical biology and to provide drug candidates as potential therapeutic agents
The first step in this process is to identify compounds that bind to a specific target; experimentally this is usually achieved with high-throughput (HTS) or fragment screening (FS)
As detailed in Supporting Information Text S1, all receptors, docking cavities and ligands were prepared in the same manner and running parameters modified to ensure exhaustive sampling by all programs
Summary
The discovery of small molecules with biological activities is important to probe biological mechanism in chemical biology and to provide drug candidates as potential therapeutic agents. Developed at the company known as Vernalis (http://www.vernalis.com), the software, PLOS Computational Biology | www.ploscompbiol.org rDock: An Open Source Program for Ligand Docking scoring functions, and search protocols have been refined continuously over a number of years to meet the demands of inhouse discovery projects on heat-shock proteins [7,8,9], kinases [10,11,12,13] and other targets.
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