Superposition of Three-Dimensional Chemical Structures Allowing for Conformational Flexibility by a Hybrid Method
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1998 papers
Abstract
The superposition of three-dimensional structures is the first task in the evaluation of the largest common three-dimensional substructure of a set of molecules. This is an important step in the identification of a pharmacophoric pattern for molecules that bind to the same receptor. The superposition method described here combines a genetic algorithm with a numerical optimization method. A major goal is to adequately address the conformational flexibility of ligand molecules. The genetic algorithm optimizes in a nondeterministic process the size and the geometric fit of the substructures. The geometric fit is further improved by changing torsional angles combining the genetic algorithm and the directed tweak method. This directed tweak method is based on a numerical quasi-Newton optimization method. Only one starting conformation per molecule is necessary. Molecules having several rotatable bonds and quite different initial conformations are modified to find large structural similarities. A set of angiotensin II antagonists is investigated to illustrate the performance of the method.
Related Papers
- → Frequency-Domain Substructure Isolation for Local Damage Identification(2014)24 cited
- → The dynamic synthesis of general non-conservative structures from separately identified substructure models(1985)13 cited
- → ON THE DESIGN OF THE SUBSTRUCTURE EQUILIBRATED WITH THE SUPERSTRUCTURE OF BEAM BRIDGE(1960)
- → 1314 Development of Vibration Characteristic Optimization System of Large-scale Complicated Structure(2005)
- → Structure Damage Detection via the Behavior of Substructure(1991)