3.9 Review

Advancing the field of computational drug design using multicanonical molecular dynamics-based dynamic docking

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL REVIEWS
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages 1349-1358

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s12551-022-01010-z

Keywords

Dynamic docking; Protein receptors and their ligands; Multicanonical molecular dynamics; Principal component analysis; Cluster free energy; Binding configurations

Categories

Funding

  1. We are especially grateful to Prof. Haruki Nakamura for his advice and ideas regarding the development of our dynamic docking methodology.

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Multicanonical molecular dynamics-based dynamic docking is a powerful tool that accurately predicts the binding configuration between flexible molecules, provides insights into binding pathways, and can identify alternative binding sites through exhaustive sampling.
Multicanonical molecular dynamics (McMD)-based dynamic docking is a powerful tool to not only predict the native binding configuration between two flexible molecules, but it can also be used to accurately simulate the binding/unbinding pathway. Furthermore, it can also predict alternative binding sites, including allosteric ones, by employing an exhaustive sampling approach. Since McMD-based dynamic docking accurately samples binding/unbinding events, it can thus be used to determine the molecular mechanism of binding between two molecules. We developed the McMD-based dynamic docking methodology based on the powerful, but woefully underutilized McMD algorithm, combined with a toolset to perform the docking and to analyze the results. Here, we showcase three of our recent works, where we have applied McMD-based dynamic docking to advance the field of computational drug design. In the first case, we applied our method to perform an exhaustive search between Hsp90 and one of its inhibitors to successfully predict the native binding configuration in its binding site, as we refined our analysis methods. For our second case, we performed an exhaustive search of two medium-sized ligands and Bcl-xL, which has a cryptic binding site that differs greatly between the apo and holo structures. Finally, we performed a dynamic docking simulation between a membrane-embedded GPCR molecule and a high affinity ligand that binds deep within its receptor's pocket. These advanced simulations showcase the power that the McMD-based dynamic docking method has, and provide a glimpse of the potential our methodology has to unravel and solve the medical and biophysical issues in the modern world.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available