Abstract
Finding drugs that inhibit protein-protein interactions is usually difficult. While computeraided design is used widely to facilitate the drug discovery process for protein targets with well-defined binding pockets, its application to the design of inhibitors targeting a protein surface is very limited. In this mini-review we address two aspects of this issue: firstly, we overview the current state of design methodology for inhibitors specifically targeting protein surfaces, and secondly, we briefly outline recent advances in computational methods for structure-based drug design. These methods are closely related to protein docking and protein recognition, the difference being that in ligand design, ligands are built on a fragment-by-fragment basis. A novel scheme of computational combinatorial ligand design developed for the design of inhibitors that interfere with protein-protein interaction is described in detail. Current applications and limitations of this methodology, as well as its future prospects, are discussed.