A Review on Parallel Virtual Screening Softwares for High-Performance ComputersShow others and affiliations
2022 (English)In: Pharmaceuticals, E-ISSN 1424-8247, Vol. 15, no 1, p. 63-, article id 63
Article, review/survey (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Drug discovery is the most expensive, time-demanding, and challenging project in biopharmaceutical companies which aims at the identification and optimization of lead compounds from large-sized chemical libraries. The lead compounds should have high-affinity binding and specificity for a target associated with a disease, and, in addition, they should have favorable pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties (grouped as ADMET properties). Overall, drug discovery is a multivariable optimization and can be carried out in supercomputers using a reliable scoring function which is a measure of binding affinity or inhibition potential of the drug-like compound. The major problem is that the number of compounds in the chemical spaces is huge, making the computational drug discovery very demanding. However, it is cheaper and less time-consuming when compared to experimental high-throughput screening. As the problem is to find the most stable (global) minima for numerous protein-ligand complexes (on the order of 10(6) to 10(12)), the parallel implementation of in silico virtual screening can be exploited to ensure drug discovery in affordable time. In this review, we discuss such implementations of parallelization algorithms in virtual screening programs. The nature of different scoring functions and search algorithms are discussed, together with a performance analysis of several docking softwares ported on high-performance computing architectures.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
MDPI AG , 2022. Vol. 15, no 1, p. 63-, article id 63
Keywords [en]
computational drug discovery, virtual screening, molecular docking, chemical space, parallelization, high-performance computers and accelerators
National Category
Medicinal Chemistry
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-309007DOI: 10.3390/ph15010063ISI: 000747871300001PubMedID: 35056120Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85130159729OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-309007DiVA, id: diva2:1639799
Note
QC 20220222
2022-02-222022-02-222023-06-08Bibliographically approved