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MovableType Software for Fast Free Energy-Based Virtual Screening: Protocol Development, Deployment, Validation, and Assessment.

Zheng ZhengOleg Y BorbulevychHao LiuJianpeng DengRoger I MartinLance M Westerhoff
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2020)
For decades, the complicated energy surfaces found in macromolecular protein:ligand structures, which require large amounts of computational time and resources for energy state sampling, have been an inherent obstacle to fast, routine free energy estimation in industrial drug discovery efforts. Beginning in 2013, the Merz research group addressed this cost with the introduction of a novel sampling methodology termed "Movable Type" (MT). Using numerical integration methods, the MT method reduces the computational expense for energy state sampling by independently calculating each atomic partition function from an initial molecular conformation in order to estimate the molecular free energy using ensembles of the atomic partition functions. In this work, we report a software package, the DivCon Discovery Suite with the MovableType module from QuantumBio Inc., that performs this MT free energy estimation protocol in a fast, fully encapsulated manner. We discuss the computational procedures and improvements to the original work, and we detail the corresponding settings for this software package. Finally, we introduce two validation benchmarks to evaluate the overall robustness of the method against a broad range of protein:ligand structural cases. With these publicly available benchmarks, we show that the method can use a variety of input types and parameters and exhibits comparable predictability whether the method is presented with "expensive" X-ray structures or "inexpensively docked" theoretical models. We also explore some next steps for the method. The MovableType software is available at http://www.quantumbioinc.com/.
Keyphrases
  • drug discovery
  • high resolution
  • data analysis
  • heavy metals
  • amino acid
  • computed tomography
  • single molecule
  • high throughput
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • cystic fibrosis
  • electron microscopy