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Bioisosteric Replacements Extracted from High-Quality Structures in the Protein Databank.

Matthew P SeddonDavid A CosgroveValerie J Gillet
Published in: ChemMedChem (2018)
Bioisosterism is an important concept in the lead optimisation phase of drug discovery where the aim is to make modifications to parts of a molecule in order to improve some properties while maintaining others. We present an analysis of bioisosteric fragments extracted from the ligands in an established data set consisting of 121 protein targets. A pairwise analysis is carried out of all ligands for a given target. The ligands are fragmented using the BRICS fragmentation scheme and a pair of fragments is deemed to be bioisosteric if they occupy a similar volume of the protein binding site. We consider two levels of generality, one which does not consider the number of attachment points in the fragments and a more restricted case in which both fragments are required to have the same number of attachments. We investigate the extent to which the bioisosteric pairs that are found are common across different target.
Keyphrases
  • drug discovery
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • big data
  • mass spectrometry