Pharmacophore modeling incorporates
geometric and chemical features
of known inhibitors and/or targeted binding sites to rationally identify
and design new drug leads. In this study, we have encoded a three-dimensional
pharmacophore matching similarity (FMS) scoring function into the
structure-based design program DOCK. Validation and characterization
of the method are presented through pose reproduction, crossdocking,
and enrichment studies. When used alone, FMS scoring dramatically
improves pose reproduction success to 93.5% (∼20% increase)
and reduces sampling failures to 3.7% (∼6% drop) compared to
the standard energy score (SGE) across 1043 protein–ligand
complexes. The combined FMS+SGE function further improves success
to 98.3%. Crossdocking experiments using FMS and FMS+SGE scoring,
for six diverse protein families, similarly showed improvements in
success, provided proper pharmacophore references are employed. For
enrichment, incorporating pharmacophores during sampling and scoring,
in most cases, also yield improved outcomes when docking and rank-ordering
libraries of known actives and decoys to 15 systems. Retrospective
analyses of virtual screenings to three clinical drug targets (EGFR,
IGF-1R, and HIVgp41) using X-ray structures of known inhibitors as
pharmacophore references are also reported, including a customized
FMS scoring protocol to bias on selected regions in the reference.
Overall, the results and fundamental insights gained from this study
should benefit the docking community in general, particularly researchers
using the new FMS method to guide computational drug discovery with
DOCK.
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