A D3R prospective evaluation of machine learning for protein-ligand scoring.

Journal: Journal of computer-aided molecular design
Published Date:

Abstract

We assess the performance of several machine learning-based scoring methods at protein-ligand pose prediction, virtual screening, and binding affinity prediction. The methods and the manner in which they were trained make them sufficiently diverse to evaluate the utility of various strategies for training set curation and binding pose generation, but they share a novel approach to classification in the context of protein-ligand scoring. Rather than explicitly using structural data such as affinity values or information extracted from crystal binding poses for training, we instead exploit the abundance of data available from high-throughput screening to approach the problem as one of discriminating binders from non-binders. We evaluate the performance of our various scoring methods in the 2015 D3R Grand Challenge and find that although the merits of some features of our approach remain inconclusive, our scoring methods performed comparably to a state-of-the-art scoring function that was fit to binding affinity data.

Authors

  • Jocelyn Sunseri
    Department of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Suite 3064, Biomedical Science Tower 3 (BST3), 3501 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA.
  • Matthew Ragoza
    Department of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Suite 3064, Biomedical Science Tower 3 (BST3), 3501 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA.
  • Jasmine Collins
    Department of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Suite 3064, Biomedical Science Tower 3 (BST3), 3501 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA.
  • David Ryan Koes
    Department of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Suite 3064, Biomedical Science Tower 3 (BST3), 3501 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA. dkoes@pitt.edu.