Presentations at the Fields Institute and at the Spring 2010 ACS meeting

The Fields Institute, located in Toronto, is a center for mathematical research activity - a place where mathematicians from Canada and abroad, from business, industry and financial institutions, come together to carry out research and formulate problems of mutual interest.

SimBioSys founder and CSO, Zsolt Zsoldos, who is both a mathematician / computer scientist and a chemist, was recently invited to speak at one of the Fields’ Seminars. This was a great honour and recognition of the scientific
work he does at SimBioSys with his team of exceptional and talented researchers. The title of the March 2nd, 2010 presentation was: “Algorithmic and mathematical challenges in protein-ligand docking and scoring”, which has been a significant part of Zsolt’s work in the past 10 years. He tried squeezing it into just a 1 hour session, and that alone was a huge challenge. Nevertheless, there were many sparkling eyes in the audience, and hopefully the whole topic created enough interest so that we’ll see a few more mathematicians in this challenging field of science in the future. You can check out Zsolt’s talk at: http://www.simbiosys.com/science/presentations/index.html#2010
the audio and slides of the talk will be also shortly posted at Fields Institute’s web site at: http://www.fields.utoronto.ca/audio/#optimization_seminar

Another current, and interesting talk by a SimBioSys’ scientist will be given by Orr Ravitz at the upcoming spring 2010 ACS meeting in San Francisco. He will be talking about “Improving molecular docking through eHiTS’ tunable
scoring function”, in the Drug Discovery session on Monday March 22, 2010 at 10:00 am.

Abstract: The molecular docking paradigm has been hampered by the lack of a generically well performing scoring function. We present two complementary family-based approaches for score-tuning that improve docking performance  using experimental data. One technique treats the relative weights of the eHiTS energy terms as parameters that can be adjusted to improve score-RMSD correlations. The other technique is employing ligand-based similarity to rescale the docking score such that better enrichment factors are achieved in virtual screening. We discuss the algorithmic details of the methods, and demonstrate the effects of score tuning on a variety of targets, including CDK2, BACE1 and AChBP, as well as on common benchmarks. We observe an average improvement of 10% in the top-rank pose RMSD, and a similar improvement for docking success (top pose under 2 A). An average EF(1%) of 15 is achieved for the targets in the DUD set.
http://abstracts.acs.org/chem/239nm/program/view.php?obj_id=9832&terms=

Should be a discussion starter! Please join us for the session if you’ll be at the ACS meeting in SFO in two weeks, and contact us if you would like to meet  with us during the days of the conference.
posted by Aniko

One Response to “Presentations at the Fields Institute and at the Spring 2010 ACS meeting”

  1. from sbs Says:

    The ACS meeting presentation is now posted under the usual spot:
    http://www.simbiosys.com/science/presentations/index.html
    more concrete location:
    http://www.simbiosys.com/science/presentations/2010-03-acs/eHiTS_239_ACS_website.pdf

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