Journal article
Challenges and advances in computational docking: 2009 in review
E Yuriev, M Agostino, PA Ramsland
Journal of Molecular Recognition | Published : 2011
DOI: 10.1002/jmr.1077
Abstract
Docking is a computational technique that places a small molecule (ligand) in the binding site of its macromolecular target (receptor) and estimates its binding affinity. This review addresses methodological developments that have occurred in the docking field in 2009, with a particular focus on the more difficult, and sometimes controversial, aspects of this promising computational discipline. These developments aim to address the main challenges of docking: receptor representation (such aspects as structural waters, side chain protonation, and, most of all, flexibility (from side chain rotation to domain movement)), ligand representation (protonation, tautomerism and stereoisomerism, and t..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC)
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded in part by grants ID566722 and ID543317 (to P. A. Ramsland) from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC). M. Agostino is a recipient of an Australian Postgraduate Award (APA). P.A. Ramsland is a recipient of an R. Douglas Wright Career Development Award (ID365209) from the NHMRC. The authors gratefully acknowledge the contribution to this work of the Victorian Operational Infrastructure Support Program received by the Burnet Institute.