Fragment molecular orbital study of the binding energy of ligands to the estrogen receptor
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH in Pure and Applied Chemistry
- Vol. 75 (11-12) , 2405-2410
- https://doi.org/10.1351/pac200375112405
Abstract
We examined the published data for the binding affinity of typical ligands to the α-subtype of the human estrogen receptor with use of an approximate molecular orbital method applicable to interacting molecular clusters. An ab initio procedure for "molecular fragments" proposed recently to deal with such macromolecules as proteins was applied to the molecular orbital calculations. The receptor protein was primarily modeled using 50 amino acid residues surrounding the ligand. For a few ligand-receptor complexes, the binding energy was also calculated with use of 241 amino acid residues contained in the entire binding domain. No significant difference was found in the calculated binding energy between the complex modeled with ligand-surrounding 50 amino acids and that with residues of the entire domain. The calculated binding energy was correlated very well with the published relative binding affinity for typical ligands.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simulations of the Estrogen Receptor Ligand-Binding Domain: Affinity of Natural Ligands and XenoestrogensJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2000
- The role of ligand flexibility in predicting biological activity: Structure–activity relationships for aryl hydrocarbon, estrogen, and androgen receptor binding affinityEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1998