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Emerging Computational Methods for the Rational Discovery of Allosteric Drugs

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 116, Issue 11, Pages 6370-6390

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00631

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [DP2 OD007237]
  2. National Science Foundation [TG-CHE060073N]
  3. National Biomedical Computation Resource [NIH P41 GM103426]
  4. NIH Molecular Biophysics Training Grant [T32 GM008326]

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Allosteric-drug development holds promise for delivering medicines that are more selective and less toxic than those that target orthosteric sites. To date, the discovery of allosteric binding sites and lead compounds has been mostly serendipitous, achieved through high-throughput screening. Over the past decade, structural data has become more readily available for larger protein systems and more membrane protein classes (e.g.,. GPCRs and ion channels), which are common allosteric drug, targets. In parallel, improved simulation methods now, provide better atomistic understanding of the protein dynamics and cooperative motions that are critical to allosteric mechanisms. As a result of these advances, the field of predictive allosteric drug development is now on the cusp of a new era of rational structure-based computational methods. Here, we review algorithms that predict allosteric sites based on sequence data and molecular dynamics simulations, describe tools that assess the druggability of these pockets, and discuss how Markov state models and topology analyses provide insight into the relationship between protein dynamics and allosteric drug binding. In each, section, we first provide an overview of the various method classes before describing relevant algorithms and software packages.

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