
Comp Chem Kitchen: CCK-18
Event Information
Description
TL;DR: UPDATE: We are going virtual! Our next Comp Chem Kitchen, CCK-18, will be via a Zoom Webinar, on Friday, March 27, 2020, at 5-6 pm. We are delighted to announce that Prof. Andreas Bender from the University of Cambridgewill be speaking, as well as Dr Vicky Hellon from F1000 Research. To attend the CCK-18 webinar, you must sign up for a free Eventbrite ticket (limit 100).
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
Please join us via Zoom Webinar for our next "Comp Chem Kitchen", CCK-18, at 5-6 pm on Friday, March 27th, 2020. We are very pleased to announce Dr. Andreas Bender from the Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, UK, will be speaking, as well as Vicky Hellon from F1000Research. Note: you must sign up for a free Eventbrite ticket (limit 100). We will send you a link and instructure how to join.
Dr. Andreas Bender (University of Cambridge): "AI in Drug Discovery - What is Realistic, What are Illusions?"
While 'AI in Drug Discovery' is currently a hot topic, it is important to be optimistic, yet realistic, about its opportunities in the area: Drugs work in biological systems, which are noisy by their very nature, and which we don't understand properly. This presentation will outline approaches and applications of AI in the drug discovery field, with a particular focus on data currently available to us, and challenges with the translation of computational predictions into the physiological (in vivo) context.
- Dr Andreas Bender is a Reader for Molecular Informatics with the Centre for Molecular Science Informatics at the Department of Chemistry of the University of Cambridge, leading a group of about 15 postdocs, PhD and graduate students and academic visitors in the area of life science data analysis. In parallel, he leads a team in Computational Drug Safety and ADME within the Clinical Pharmacology & Safety Sciences group at AstraZeneca in Cambridge (CPSS DSAI). In his work, Andreas is involved with the integration and analysis of chemical and biological data, aimed at understanding phenotypic compound action (such as cellular readouts, and also organism-level effects) on a mechanistic level, predicting molecular properties related to both compound effiacy and toxicity, as well as drug repurposing. He received his PhD from the University of Cambridge and worked in the Lead Discovery Informatics group at Novartis in Cambridge, MA, USA, as well as at Leiden University in the Netherlands before his current post. In 2013 he was awarded an ERC Starting Grant to model mixture effects of chemical structures in biological systems using mechanistic approaches, an area currently very little understood.
Dr Vicky Hellon (Associate Publisher, F1000Research): "F1000Research: Open Access publishing and Chemoinformatics"
F1000Research was established as a publishing platform in 2013 with the aim of pioneering open research through open data, open peer review and transparency throughout the publication process. The talk will discuss open publishing in general, how the publication model at F1000Research works and how this differs from more ‘traditional’ scientific publishing. There will also be discussion on the F1000Research Chemical Information Science Gateway and our experiences of publishing in the Chemoinformatics/software area.
- Vicky Hellon is the Associate Publisher at F1000Research which she joined in 2017 after previous roles in Open Access publishing at Nature Research. Her role encompasses developing content across F1000Research, building collaborations and supporting the development of funder specific publishing platforms, particularly Wellcome Open Research and also HRB Open Research which she is currently project lead on. She is passionate about the progression of open research and particularly enjoys opportunities to actively engage with the research community.
We would like to thank the University of Oxford MPLS Network and Interdisciplinary Fund (NIF) for making CCK possible.
About CCK
Comp Chem Kitchen is a regular forum and seminar series to hear about and discuss computational methods for tackling problems in chemistry, biochemistry and drug discovery. It focuses principally on cheminformatics, computational chemistry, and molecular modelling, and overlaps with neighboring areas such as materials properties and bioinformatics.
We’re keen to encourage people involved in coding and methods development (i.e. hackers, in the original untarnished sense of the word) to join us. Our hope is that we will share best practices, even code snippets and software tools, and avoid re-inventing wheels.
In addition to local researchers, we invite speakers from industry and non-profits from time to time, and occasionally organize software demos and tutorials.
If you're interested in giving a talk, here are some possible topics:
- Software development (e.g.: Python, C, C++, CUDA, shell, Matlab);
- Optimizing force field parameters & EVB models;
- Cheminformatics (e.g.: RDKit);
- X-ray and NMR crystallography, including small molecule and macromolecular;
- Protein & RNA modeling, including Molecular Dynamics;
- Virtual screening and Docking;
- Machine Learning;
- Quantum Methods, including DFT.
Bring your laptops, by the way, if you have something you'd like to show!
Want to speak? Ideas for speakers?
* If you have ideas for speakers, or would like to give a talk, let us know. We also invite lightning talks of 5 minutes (or fewer) from attendees, so if you have some cool code you’ve been working on and would like to demo, bring your laptop, smartphone, tablet, (wearable?) and tell us all about it. *
Please pass this message on to friends, colleagues, and students who may be interested too!
The main CCK web site is: http://compchemkitchen.org/
Follow us on Twitter: @CompChemKitchen
See you soon! We’re looking forward to seeing and hearing about the diverse range of computational molecular science that you’re cooking up...
—Garrett, Richard, Phil, and Fernanda
garrett.morris@stats.ox.ac.uk
richard.cooper@chem.ox.ac.uk
philip.biggin@bioch.ox.ac.uk
fernanda.duartegonzalez@chem.ox.ac.uk