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Protein-Ligand Empirical Interaction Components for Virtual Screening.

Yuna YanWeijun WangZhaoxi SunJohn Zenghui ZhangChangge Ji
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2017)
A major shortcoming of empirical scoring functions is that they often fail to predict binding affinity properly. Removing false positives of docking results is one of the most challenging works in structure-based virtual screening. Postdocking filters, making use of all kinds of experimental structure and activity information, may help in solving the issue. We describe a new method based on detailed protein-ligand interaction decomposition and machine learning. Protein-ligand empirical interaction components (PLEIC) are used as descriptors for support vector machine learning to develop a classification model (PLEIC-SVM) to discriminate false positives from true positives. Experimentally derived activity information is used for model training. An extensive benchmark study on 36 diverse data sets from the DUD-E database has been performed to evaluate the performance of the new method. The results show that the new method performs much better than standard empirical scoring functions in structure-based virtual screening. The trained PLEIC-SVM model is able to capture important interaction patterns between ligand and protein residues for one specific target, which is helpful in discarding false positives in postdocking filtering.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • amino acid
  • big data
  • artificial intelligence
  • electronic health record
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • adverse drug