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  PhD Studentship – Free energy calculations in drug discovery


   Chemistry

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  Prof Jonathan Essex, Prof Jeremy Frey  Applications accepted all year round  Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Protein-ligand binding free energy is a crucial property used in the discovery and optimisation of novel drugs. In the context of computer-aided drug design, being able to calculate accurate, precise and reproducible binding free energies in silico is essential in terms of reducing the amount of trial-and-error synthetic effort required to develop a candidate drug. More potent and selective compounds will bind strongly to the desired target, and show weak binding to related proteins. Recent commercial software products have pushed the use of binding free energy calculations into mainstream development pipelines within the pharmaceutical industry. Even with pre-screening of suitable target systems, however, the required predictive accuracy of 1 kcal mol-1 is only attained in around half of cases. Determining whether sufficient accuracy has been achieved for a particular system is currently not possible a priori and requires expensive and time-consuming experimental validation.

In this project the accuracy of these free energy calculations in the context of the pharmaceutical industry will be explored. We will develop a large dataset of test systems based on published data and determine the sensitivity of the calculated free energies to the choice of simulation software, parameters, free energy calculation method and system setup. Based on this sensitivity analysis, the project objectives are twofold:
1. To identify the primary causes of inaccuracy in protein-ligand binding free energy calculations. Through this we will be able to identify a priori on which systems these approaches will be successful. This information will be extremely valuable, allowing those cases where the methods will be useful to be identified without requiring extensive and expensive experimental validation.
2. To improve free energy calculation methodology to address these sensitivities. We have considerable experience of optimising free energy methodology, including in recent years the use of advanced force fields and enhanced sampling methods.


Funding Notes

The project is funded for 3 ½ years and welcomes applicants from the UK and EU who have or expect to obtain at least an upper second class degree in Chemistry, Physics, Biochemistry or allied subjects/relevant disciplines. Funding will cover fees and a stipend at current research council rates per annum (201920 rates are £15,009).

Due to funding restrictions this position is only open to UK students and EU students who meet the RCUK eligibility criteria

References

Applications for a PhD in Chemistry should be submitted online at https://studentrecords.soton.ac.uk/BNNRPROD/bzsksrch.P_Search

Please ensure you select the academic session 2019-20 when making your application in the academic year field and click on the Research radio button. Enter Chemistry in the search text field

Please place ESSEX in the field for proposed supervisor/project

General enquiries should be made to Prof Jon Essex at jwe1@soton.ac.uk. Any queries on the application process should be made to feps-pgr-apply@soton.ac.uk

Applications will be considered in the order that they are received, and the position will be considered filled when a suitable candidate has been identified

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