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Scoring functions for docking

In the fields of computational chemistry and molecular modelling, scoring functions are mathematical functions used to approximately predict the binding affinity between two molecules after they have been docked. Most commonly one of the molecules is a small organic compound such as a drug and the second is the drug's biological target such as a protein receptor. Scoring functions have also been developed to predict the strength of intermolecular interactions between two proteins or between protein and DNA. In the fields of computational chemistry and molecular modelling, scoring functions are mathematical functions used to approximately predict the binding affinity between two molecules after they have been docked. Most commonly one of the molecules is a small organic compound such as a drug and the second is the drug's biological target such as a protein receptor. Scoring functions have also been developed to predict the strength of intermolecular interactions between two proteins or between protein and DNA. Scoring functions are widely used in drug discovery and other molecular modelling applications. These include: A potentially more reliable but much more computationally demanding alternative to scoring functions are free energy perturbation calculations.

[ "Searching the conformational space for docking", "Protein–ligand docking", "Ligand (biochemistry)" ]
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