Message boards : News : (Another) New publication: optimized methods to compute binding free energies
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May the party continue with our second publication from GPUGRID computations! The work, also to be published at the Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, presents the optimization of a previously developed protocol to accurately compute binding affinities between proteins and small peptides. Such methods may be employed in the future for drug design studies. WUs related to this publication are all the *pYEEI*. Congratulations to you all! | |
ID: 21183 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Abstract: The prediction of protein–ligand binding free energies is an important goal of computational biochemistry, yet accuracy, reproducibility, and cost remain a problem. Nevertheless, these are essential requirements for computational methods to become standard binding prediction tools in discovery pipelines. Here, we present the results of an extensive search for an optimal method based on an ensemble of umbrella sampling all-atom molecular simulations tested on the phosphorylated tetrapeptide, pYEEI, binding to the SH2 domain, resulting in an accurate and converged binding free energy of −9.0 ± 0.5 kcal/mol (compared to an experimental value of −8.0 ± 0.1 kcal/mol). We find that a minimum of 300 ns of sampling is required for every prediction, a target easily achievable using new generation accelerated MD codes. Convergence is obtained by using an ensemble of simulations per window, each starting from different initial conformations, and by optimizing window-width, orthogonal restraints, reaction coordinate harmonic potentials, and window-sample time. The use of uncorrelated initial conformations in neighboring windows is important for correctly sampling conformational transitions from the unbound to bound states that affect significantly the precision of the calculations. This methodology thus provides a general recipe for reproducible and practical computations of binding free energies for a class of semirigid protein–ligand systems, within the limit of the accuracy of the force field used. | |
ID: 21193 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Congratulations! | |
ID: 21194 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I would expect to see plenty of references to this paper in the future ;) | |
ID: 21203 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
May the party continue with our second publication from GPUGRID computations! The work, also to be published at the Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, presents the optimization of a previously developed protocol to accurately compute binding affinities between proteins and small peptides. Such methods may be employed in the future for drug design studies. WUs related to this publication are all the *pYEEI*. Congratulations to you all! You guys don't seem to get a mention on the main BOINC site in the news. Do you mention it to Dr Anderson? He could then add it as the other projects seem to mention their successes and milestones. A bit of promotion for the project wouldn't go astray. ____________ BOINC blog | |
ID: 21299 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
http://boinc.berkeley.edu/ - News, right hand side. | |
ID: 21300 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
http://boinc.berkeley.edu/ - News, right hand side. Yes thats the one. No mention of GPUgrid. Various other projects and milestones, but nothing about GPUgrid. Also worth noting is that Boinc 6.12.x has a Notices tab that can be used by projects for announcements. The project developers would need to update the server side software so they can use them. ____________ BOINC blog | |
ID: 21303 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
It seems we've (GPUgrid that is) finally got a mention on the BOINC website in the news section. Posted 2 days ago... | |
ID: 21533 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : News : (Another) New publication: optimized methods to compute binding free energies