Summary: Freeware for Drug Design



Dear Friends:
 Here is the first list of summary on freeware for drug design. If you have
 any
 additional info other than that I summarised below, please let me know.
 I will make second part of the summary. Thanks and Regards
 - Parthiban S
 --------------------my query--------------
 Dear Friends:
 I am looking for downloadable programs (trivial to sophisticated) applicable
 in
 various stages of drug discovery pipeline. Kindly send me the URL and/or
 any other helpful info. As an useful prcatice, I will summarise the replies.
 Thanks and Regards
 S Parthiban
 Jubilant Biosys
 ------------------Summary of replies-----------------
 From: "Dr. N. SUKUMAR" <nagams "at@at" rpi.edu>
 http://www.chem.rpi.edu/chemweb/recondoc/WinRecon.html
 http://www.drugmining.com/
 RECON is an algorithm for the rapid reconstruction of molecular charge
 densities and charge density-based electronic properties of molecules,
 using atomic charge density fragments precomputed from ab initio
 wavefunctions. The method is based on Bader's quantum theory of Atoms in
 Molecules.
 A library of atomic charge density fragments has been built in a form that
 allows for the rapid retrieval of the fragments and molecular assembly. The
 RECON algorithm reads in a molecular database, determines atom types and
 environments, assigns the closest match from the library of atom types and
 combines the densities of the atomic fragments to compute a large set of
 new and traditional QSAR descriptors. QSPR and QSER indices for large
 pharmaceutical databases or proteins can be computed within seconds.
 Dr. N. Sukumar, Professor Curt M. Breneman
 Rensselaer Department of Chemistry
 ---------
 From: Stephen Bowlus stephen.bowlus "at@at" lionbioscience.com
 A wealth of information is in the CCL archives, so you might want to search
 these.  Cheap (but not free!) SW is also available through QCPE or its
 Japanese equivalent.
 There are several tools from Illinois, like VMD and NAMD.  A complete list
 is at
 http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/#serv/
 Vega is a nice, small-molecule program:
 http://users.unimi.it/~ddl/
 MOPAC for Windows is useful.  The page quoted is a bit wierd, but if you
 have a problem, e-mail the page contact; he is very helpful:
 http://members.fortunecity.com/winmopac/
 And if you can work on the net (using servers, not downloading the
 programs), be sure to look at what is available at the following.  This is
 more focused on receptor modeling, but I have found them useful in the past:
 RCSB:  http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/
 NCBI:  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Database/index.html
 ExPASy:  http://www.expasy.org/
 PredictProtein:
 http://cubic.bioc.columbia.edu/predictprotein/predictprotein.html
 ------
 From: michael hanlon (BITS) michael.hanlon "at@at" bbsrc.ac.uk
 MODELLER is popular for protein modelling, including within the drug
 discovery sector. It's free to academics:
  http://tatiana.rockefeller.edu/modeller/
  Autodock is pretty widely used for molecular docking, and comes up on this
 list a fair bit:
  http://www.scripps.edu/pub/olson-web/doc/autodock/
  Mike
 ------
 From: "Sergio Manzetti" <sergio "at@at" proinformatix.com>
 Hey you can download a demo of the molecular modelling builder ChemSite
 it lasts for 60 days I think..
 http://www.chemsw.com/d_10202.htm
 For protein modelling get Swiss PDB Viewer, which is much better than
 Modeller:
 www.expasy.org/spdbv
 Sergio
 ----------
 From: Giulio Vistoli giulio.vistoli "at@at" unimi.it
 Dear S Parthiban,
 Our program VEGA (http://users.unimi.it/~ddl) can be useful in several
 stages of drug desing and molecular modelling: indeed it can convert several
 file formats, analyze molecular trajectories and ligand-receptor complexes,
 assign atom types and atomic charges. Moreover VEGA has a graphical
 interface for Win32 PCs and it is expansible with a plugin architecture
 system.
  Giulio Vistoli
 http://users.unimi.it/~ddl
 ----------
 From: "Fabien Fontaine" <ffontaine "at@at" imim.es>
 Try this
 http://www.qspr.pe.kr/CS-content1.html
 and also
 www.miasrl.com/software.htm
 Fabien
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