Software:LigandScout

From HandWiki
LigandScout
Developer(s)Inte:Ligand GmbH
Initial release2005; 19 years ago (2005)
Stable release
4.4.3 / January 21, 2020; 4 years ago (2020-01-21)
Operating systemWindows, Mac OS X, Linux
Platformx86, x86-64
Available inEnglish
TypeMolecular modelling and design
LicenseProprietary commercial software
Websitewww.inteligand.com/ligandscout

LigandScout is computer software that allows creating three-dimensional (3D) pharmacophore models from structural data of macromoleculeligand complexes, or from training and test sets of organic molecules. It incorporates a complete definition of 3D chemical features (such as hydrogen bond donors, acceptors, lipophilic areas, positively and negatively ionizable chemical groups) that describe the interaction of a bound small organic molecule (ligand) and the surrounding binding site of the macromolecule.[1] These pharmacophores can be overlaid and superimposed using a pattern-matching based alignment algorithm[2] that is solely based on pharmacophoric feature points instead of chemical structure. From such an overlay, shared features can be interpolated to create a so-called shared-feature pharmacophore that shares all common interactions of several binding sites/ligands or extended to create a so-called merged-feature pharmacophore. The software has been successfully used to predict new lead structures in drug design, e.g., predicting biological activity of novel human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase inhibitors.[3]

Similar tools

Other software tools which help to model pharmacophores include:

See also

References

  1. "LigandScout: 3-D pharmacophores derived from protein-bound ligands and their use as virtual screening filters". J Chem Inf Model 45 (1): 160–169. 2005. doi:10.1021/ci049885e. PMID 15667141. 
  2. "Efficient overlay of small organic molecules using 3D pharmacophores". J Comput Aided Mol Des 20 (12): 773–788. 2007. doi:10.1007/s10822-006-9078-7. PMID 17051340. 
  3. "Structure-based pharmacophore identification of new chemical scaffolds as non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors". J Chem Inf Model 47 (2): 557–562. 2007. doi:10.1021/ci600320q. PMID 17274611. 
  4. Molecular Operating Environment
  5. Phase
  6. Discovery Studio
  7. SYBYL-X

Further reading