CavBench: A benchmark for protein cavity detection methods
- PMID: 31609980
- PMCID: PMC6791542
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223596
CavBench: A benchmark for protein cavity detection methods
Abstract
Extensive research has been applied to discover new techniques and methods to model protein-ligand interactions. In particular, considerable efforts focused on identifying candidate binding sites, which quite often are active sites that correspond to protein pockets or cavities. Thus, these cavities play an important role in molecular docking. However, there is no established benchmark to assess the accuracy of new cavity detection methods. In practice, each new technique is evaluated using a small set of proteins with known binding sites as ground-truth. However, studies supported by large datasets of known cavities and/or binding sites and statistical classification (i.e., false positives, false negatives, true positives, and true negatives) would yield much stronger and reliable assessments. To this end, we propose CavBench, a generic and extensible benchmark to compare different cavity detection methods relative to diverse ground truth datasets (e.g., PDBsum) using statistical classification methods.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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References
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- Shoichet B, Kuntz I, Bodian D. Molecular docking using shape descriptors. Journal of Computational Chemistry. 1992;13(3):380–397. 10.1002/jcc.540130311 - DOI
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