Publication | Closed Access
Automated site-directed drug design: a general algorithm for knowledge acquisition about hydrogen-bonding regions at protein surfaces
105
Citations
15
References
1989
Year
Site-directed Drug DesignMolecular BiologyMolecular GraphicMolecular DesignGeneral AlgorithmDrug DesignHydrogen-bonding AtomsMolecular RecognitionHydrogen-bonding RegionsBiochemistryStructure-based Drug DesignProtein ModelingSpecified Binding SitesStructural BiologyKnowledge BaseMolecular DockingNatural SciencesRational Drug DesignMedicineDrug Discovery
This is the first of four papers that begin to explore the possibility of automated site-directed drug design. A general outline is given of the logical steps involved in approaching the problem. The starting point is the process of knowledge acquisition about the site. An algorithm is described here for the construction of a map of hydrogen-bonding regions at protein surfaces directly from the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank coordinates. Hydrogen-bonding atoms are located, intramolecular bonds are searched for, hydrogen-bonding atoms at the surface are found and hydrogen-bonding regions are computed at the accessible surface. A grid is placed within each region discovered and the probability of hydrogen bonding at each grid point is computed. The output of the program is a map of hydrogen-bonding regions displayed within a user-defined window. This information can be used as part of a knowledge base for the automatic construction of novel ligands to fit specified binding sites.
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