Approaching Pharmacological Space: Events and Components

Methods Mol Biol. 2018:1800:245-274. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-7899-1_12.

Abstract

With a view to introducing the concept of pharmacological space and its potential applications in investigating and predicting the toxic mechanisms of xenobiotics, this opening chapter describes the logical relations between conformational behavior, physicochemical properties and binding spaces, which are seen as the three key elements composing the pharmacological space. While the concept of conformational space is routinely used to encode molecular flexibility, the concepts of property spaces and, particularly, of binding spaces are more innovative. Indeed, their descriptors can find fruitful applications (a) in describing the dynamic adaptability a given ligand experiences when inserted into a specific environment, and (b) in parameterizing the flexibility a ligand retains when bound to a biological target. Overall, these descriptors can conveniently account for the often disregarded entropic factors and as such they prove successful when inserted in ligand- or structure-based predictive models. Notably, and although binding space parameters can clearly be derived from MD simulations, the chapter will illustrate how docking calculations, despite their static nature, are able to evaluate ligand's flexibility by analyzing several poses for each ligand. Such an approach, which represents the founding core of the binding space concept, can find various applications in which the related descriptors show an impressive enhancing effect on the statistical performances of the resulting predictive models.

Keywords: Binding space; Conformational space; Ensemble docking simulations; Entropic factors; Ligand mobility; Property space.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Drug Discovery / methods*
  • Fuzzy Logic*
  • Ligands
  • Molecular Conformation
  • Molecular Docking Simulation
  • Molecular Dynamics Simulation
  • Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship*
  • Static Electricity

Substances

  • Ligands