Characterization of druggable pockets in the human proteome
Life & Medical Sciences
Druggable pockets are protein regions that have the ability to bind organic small molecules, and their characterization is essential in target-based drug discovery. However, deriving pocket descriptors is challenging and existing strategies are often limited in applicability. We presented PocketVec, an approach to generate pocket descriptors via inverse virtual screening of lead-like molecules. PocketVec performs comparably to leading methodologies while addressing key limitations. Additionally, we systematically search for druggable pockets in the human proteome, using experimentally determined structures and AlphaFold2 models, identifying over 32,000 binding sites across 20,000 protein domains. We then generate PocketVec descriptors for each site and conduct an extensive similarity search, exploring over 1.2 billion pairwise comparisons. Our results reveal druggable pocket similarities not detected by structure- or sequence-based methods, uncovering clusters of similar pockets in proteins lacking crystallized inhibitors and opening the door to strategies for prioritizing chemical probe development to explore the druggable space.
Given a 3D protein structure, binding site locations are established by the presence of bound ligands or by means of pocket detection algorithms. A predefined set of compounds (128 lead-like molecules in the standard PocketVec pipeline) is docked against the pocket of interest. The corresponding docking scores are then converted into rankings and stored in a vector-type format that serves to characterize the pocket.
REFERÈNCIA
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