DOCK Blaster:FAQ

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DOCK Blaster is a free virtual screening service. These are the frequently asked questions. Questions that take more than a few lines deserve their own wiki article.

General

What is DOCK Blaster?

DOCK Blaster is a free web-based service for molecular docking and virtual screening. It uses UCSF DOCK 3.5.54 as a docking engine, and ZINC as a dockable database. It runs entirely on the 700 CPU cluster in the Shoichet Lab at Mission Bay in San Francisco. The graphical user interface comprises an expert system that is designed to help guide both novices and experts to useful results.

Is DOCK Blaster formally described in a paper? How to cite?

The performance of DOCK Blaster against benchmarking data is described in Irwin, Shoichet, Mysinger et al., "Automated docking screens: a feasibility study", J. Med. Chem (2009), in press. The documentation of the interface and the software that runs it is documented on this wiki.

Why DOCK Blaster? Docking programs have been around for ages. What's new?

We are attempting to serve a constituency of investigators who would like to use docking for their projects but find the barriers to setting up their own computational lab prevent them from doing so. Experts are still welcome to use DOCK Blaster, of course. But we are really aiming to serve a broad community of biologists who seek new chemistry for their biological targets.

How do I use DOCK Blaster?

If you have a target for which you seek ligands to test, you need a structure of your target, and an indication of the binding site for which you want to find a small molecule ligand. It is incredibly helpful if you have either a single known ligand modeled into the binding site, or know ligands that bind. The target should be in PDB format, and must conform to certain rules (see Preparing Input. The indicatation of the binding site is ideally a docked ligand in mol2 format, but could also be residues surrounding the binding site in PDB format. Point your browser to [1] to get started.

If you know the PDB code of the target you wish to dock, you can simply enter it in the DOCK Blaster interface. Note: this approach currently can only work if their is an identifiable ligand in the binding site. If not, see the method above.

If you would like to see DOCK Blaster work, but you don't care which target, try the "I'm feeling lucky" option.

How much does DOCK Blaster cost to use?

DOCK Blaster is free for everyone. It is supported by NIH grant GM71896 (to BKS and JJI). We reserve the right to limit usage, particularly by intensive users.

I'm having trouble using DOCK Blaster

Please see the Problems page for a general overview of all problems.

Please see the Bugs page for information about bugs. Please report bugs to support at docking.org.

Please see the DOCK Blaster:Problems page for DOCK Blaster specific problems.

Can I trust DOCK Blaster?

This question warrants its own article. DOCK Blaster:Reliability

I think DOCK Blaster has crashed

Please see DOCK Blaster:Crash.

I have privacy concerns about my data

Please see our Privacy Policy

DOCK Blaster is reporting a problem that I don't think is real/legitimate

DOCK Blaster made completely wrong suggestions for my target

DOCK Blaster is a research tool aimed at helping people discover new ligands.

Is there any evidence that DOCK Blaster works?

DOCK Blaster uses the same docking technology (DOCK 3.5.54) and database technology (ZINC) as is used in the Shoichet Lab for all their publications. Furthermore, the DUD paper (JMC 2006). Furthermore, the DOCK Blaster paper (to appear).

What is your motivation to create and support DOCK Blaster?

We felt that many investigators who would like to use virtual screening were not using it because of several barriers to entry. We hope that DOCK Blaster will fill an niche and give access to this technology to investigators who previously were put off by the requirements to set up a docking laboratory.

Can I get my own private copy of DOCK Blaster?

If we get enough interest, we may be able to license DOCK Blaster technology. Please contact us to express your interest.

Does DOCK Blaster work better on some targets than on others?

Yes. Now, which ones? The DOCK Blaster paper will explain this for 100 test systems.

How long does DOCK Blaster take?

Overall, we aim to get you preliminary results in an hour or. Big database docking typically takes a day or so, depending on many factors. Throughput depends on the load on our servers. Thank you for your patience!

More information here: DOCK Blaster:Timings

What do DOCK Blaster results mean?

Top scoring hits are computer generate predictions of small molecules that might bind to your protein. Our success rate against actual drug targets is on the order of 5% or less, typically. Sometimes it is zero percent! Typically, we purchase 50 compounds that we like from the top 500 for experimental testing, and typically, we find a few that bind in the micromolar range.

Can I used DOCK Blaster with a different docking program?

Currently, DOCK Blaster only supports DOCK 3.5.54. It has not escaped our notice that the overall system may be appropriate for other docking engines. If this option interests you, please write us, making the case for a particular docking program.

Can I used DOCK Blaster with a different database of small molecules?

Yes, there are four ways to pick database subsets to dock.

  • our preferred subsets
  • annotated subsets
  • uploaded subsets
  • user-created subsets

We recommend the use of the "fragment-like" and "mini-lead-like" subsets of ZINC.

Why is it called "DOCK Blaster"?

The name is a tribute to BLAST, the famous sequence alignment and searching tool of NCBI. And of course DOCK. If you have a better name, let us know, there is a prize. ;-)

What is the history of DOCK Blaster?

  • DOCK Blaster originates in the docking protocol used in Tack (I.D.) Kuntz's lab 1982-1993
  • Brian K. Shoichet modified the protocol (and DOCK!) 1989-2000
  • David M. Lorber wrote the first MakeDOCK script in 2000.
  • Binqing Wei made contributions and refinements in 2001
  • Austin N. Kirschner wrote several scripts in 2002.
  • Niu Huang did DUD (2004-2006), and made improvements
  • Preliminary work on DOCK Blaster began in 2000 by John Irwin
  • The lab has been using DOCK Blaster tools, including the GUI, since summer 2003.
  • Full alpha testing (20+ users, 4 continents) in March 2007.
  • Able to "do DUD" in September 2007.
  • Beta release in October 2007 (20-100 users).
  • The first full release (and thus the start of version 2) may be in Jan 08.

Preparer / Scrutinizer Questions

Calibration Questions

Docking Questions

Results Browser and Interpretation Questions

I have a question that is not listed here...

Please use 'search' to check the documentation, use google, or try to ask our panel of experts in the blaster-fans@docking.org mailing list. If you still can't get an answer, please write support at docking.org.