Approaches to efficiently estimate solvation and explicit water energetics in ligand binding: the use of WaterMap

Water displacement plays critical role in several phases of drug discovery. Proper treatment of displacing water could improve enrichment in virtual screening and could lead to more successes in lead optimization. WaterMap has recently emerged as a promising approach in this regard; recent implement...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inExpert opinion on drug discovery Vol. 8; no. 3; p. 277
Main Authors Yang, Yue, Lightstone, Felice C, Wong, Sergio E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.03.2013
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Water displacement plays critical role in several phases of drug discovery. Proper treatment of displacing water could improve enrichment in virtual screening and could lead to more successes in lead optimization. WaterMap has recently emerged as a promising approach in this regard; recent implementations of this protocol successfully explained various binding activity that were poorly understood previously, including the well-known super affinity associated with biotin binding to streptavidin. The review briefly discusses implicit and explicit solvent models and focuses on an application of inhomogeneous solvation theory - WaterMap. Furthermore, the review discusses various successful cases where the use of WaterMap explained selectivity in protein-ligand binding and provides discussion of the fundamentals and recently successful implementations of WaterMap. The authors also discuss the limitations of this protocol and list a few approaches that could extend its implementation to more cases. WaterMap is a powerful tool for calculating the cost of desolvation for structural waters. In some cases, it proved useful in predicting relative binding free energy differences for congeneric ligands. The practical utility of WaterMap hinges in adequate application of the results in the context of all the thermodynamic contributions to binding. Potential improvements as well as integration into methods such like MM-GB/SA could extend its success.
ISSN:1746-045X
DOI:10.1517/17460441.2013.749853