Published January 24, 2022 | Version v2
Dataset Open

ePharmaLib: A Versatile Library of e-Pharmacophores to Address Small-Molecule (Poly-)Pharmacology

Description

The peer-reviewed publication for this dataset has now been published in Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, and can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00135. Please cite this when using the dataset.

Reverse pharmacophore screening (parallel screening) is an efficient and cost-effective computational method used to study the polypharmacology of drugs. To this end, we created ePharmaLib: a collection of 15,148 energetically optimized, structure-based pharmacophores (e-pharmacophores) , with 3 to 8 features constituting 12.6%, 17.9%, 20.9%, 17.1%, 10.6% and 20.9%, respectively. The pharmacophores were generated from the 3D macromolecular structures of druggable proteins in complex with diverse ligands, retrieved from the sc-PDB database (http://bioinfo-pharma.u-strasbg.fr/scPDB/). ePharmaLib can either be used with the Schrödinger’s PHASE program (https://schrodinger.com/products/phase) or PHARAO, also known as Align-it (https://silicos-it.be.s3-website-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/software/align-it/1.0.4/align-it.html).  Designed for drug discovery research, this ready-to-use library could dramatically expedite drug discovery by revealing novel molecular interactions of drugs in an efficient and cost-effective manner.

Notes

This study was supported by German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD): award No. 91653768; Baden-Württemberg Foundation: BWST_WSF-043; and German National Research Foundation (DFG): grant no. INST 37/935-1 FUGG, RTG 1976, and RTG 2202.

Files

ePharmaLib_PHASE.zip

Files (449.2 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:0e69a47b8f2c49f1f2075544a00b7359
212.8 MB Download
md5:442162d1385c12e223b03b2fec5f5ebb
64.9 MB Download
md5:807b9df59db6e68da4b4755ad2d94fa3
1.9 MB Download
md5:d1eab69903d7aa3273309aa454a17bfa
169.7 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
Journal article: 10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00135 (DOI)