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by cing
1610 days ago
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I agree with the sentiment of this paper (AF can enable drug discovery), but in this specific instance, the authors had a real opportunity contribute a general finding to the scientific community but instead they put in the lowest amount of effort (to a point where they're almost saying nothing at all). The target had dozens of related structures in the protein databank, including relatives with ~40% sequence identity. This target family has a very similar structure, and conserved active site residues. It's relevant that this target has approved cross-CDK family inhibitors (and thousands of data points of CDK family binders on ChEMBL). The conventional way to enable structure-based design is to build a homology model using a similar structure (see here: https://swissmodel.expasy.org/repository/uniprot/Q8IZL9?temp...), and in this case, there is very low deviation from the AF2 model and this "old fashioned" approach. To recap, this target had a decent model that would have likely sufficed for drug discovery. The community already knows that "homology models" can be used for structure-based drug design, so any methodological hypotheses of this paper are not supported by evidence. |
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This paper is mainly a flag planted so they can claim they landed on mars first and fastest.