Interactivity: the missing link between virtual reality technology and drug discovery pipelines
Rebecca K. Walters (1), Ella M. Gale (1), Jonathan Barnoud (1), David, R. Glowacki (2), Adrian J. Mulholland (1)

TL;DR
This paper reviews how interactive virtual reality (VR) enhances drug discovery by enabling real-time manipulation and interaction with molecular structures and simulations, thus improving understanding and design processes.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of 'interactive VR' in drug discovery, emphasizing its potential to improve molecular visualization, modification, and simulation interaction compared to traditional methods.
Findings
Interactive VR allows real-time structural modifications.
VR enhances visualization and understanding of molecular dynamics.
Application to SARS-CoV-2 protease demonstrates practical utility.
Abstract
The potential of virtual reality (VR) to contribute to drug design and development has been recognised for many years. Hardware and software developments now mean that this potential is beginning to be realised, and VR methods are being actively used in this sphere. A recent advance is to use VR not only to visualise and interact with molecular structures, but also to interact with molecular dynamics simulations of 'on the fly' (interactive molecular dynamics in VR, IMD-VR), which is useful not only for flexible docking but also to examine binding processes and conformational changes. iMD-VR has been shown to be useful for creating complexes of ligands bound to target proteins, e.g., recently applied to peptide inhibitors of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease. In this review, we use the term 'interactive VR' to refer to software where interactivity is an inherent part of the user VR…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts
