We report a new method for X-ray density ligand fitting and refinement that is suitable for a wide variety of small-molecule ligands, including macrocycles. The approach (called "xGen") augments a force field energy calculation with an electron density fitting restraint that yields an energy reward during the restrained conformational search. The resulting conformer pools balance goodness-of-fit with ligand strain. Real-space refinement from pre-existing ligand coordinates of 150 macrocycles resulted in occupancy-weighted conformational ensembles that exhibited low strain energy. The xGen ensembles improved upon electron density fit compared with the PDB reference coordinates without making use of atom-specific B-factors. Similarly, on nonmacrocycles, de novo fitting produced occupancy-weighted ensembles of many conformers that were generally better-quality density fits than the deposited primary/alternate conformational pairs. The results suggest ubiquitous low-energy ligand conformational ensembles in X-ray diffraction data and provide an alternative to using B-factors as model parameters.
CITATION STYLE
Jain, A. N., Cleves, A. E., Brueckner, A. C., Lesburg, C. A., Deng, Q., Sherer, E. C., & Reibarkh, M. Y. (2020). XGen: Real-Space Fitting of Complex Ligand Conformational Ensembles to X-ray Electron Density Maps. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 63(18), 10509–10528. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.0c01373
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