Hey guys,
Sorry for the delay in getting back; a close friend went into labour during the week so I didn't have much free time.
Yggdrasil - thanks for your reply. Out of interest do you know how accurate any of those force fields are?
Lemonoman - thanks for getting back. Sorry if I didn't make clear what I was saying. I understand the chemical space is infinite, and that's why I'm wondering how easy chemists find it to know what particular structures will bind to (for example) an enzyme. (By the way, when you say you're 'only' an B.Sc, that kind of scares me! I'm still a first year college student, so please bear with me!)
Maybe I can offer an example of what I'm getting at. A friend of mine was recently involved in designing a virtual screening software package which I think she said screened about 10^5 molecules a year against an enzyme to find an 'optimal' bind to use as a basis for a ligand. But I don't understand the point in screening 10^5 molecules, because the amount of chemicals possible is infinite. I think many medicinal chemists put the number (roughly) somewhere between 10^60 to 10^400 for chemicals useful to them - of which only I think about 10^10 or so have ever been made. These numbers are clearly all crazy. But as a very rough guide, 10^5 molecules is hardly anything (as a percentage of 10^60 is pretty much doesn't even register).
So can I ask you a question: say I came to you in your lab and said, 'hey I have an enzyme with it's electronic structure (or even just molecular structure), and I need you to make me a chemical to bind with it / part of it so as to alter its function in a desired way' - could you do that? Or is that really difficult to do? And if it is, then how do chemists 'rationalise' the way they go about creating new ligands?
One other question (if I may?): have you ever used Sprout or Ludi in their de novo forms? I heard they have some problems with applicability - do you have any thoughts on this?
Thanks again for your time! I really appreciate your help in this!
Best wishes, Punita