Nov 26 2025 Feedback.
Google Search: Keyword Search:
Contents
 
Introduction
Help Videos
Reference Guide
Getting Started
Protein Structure
Molecular Graphics
Slides & ActiveICM
Sequences & Alignments
Protein Modeling
Cheminformatics
 Read
 Save
 Chemical Spreadsheets
 Editor
 Chemical Search
 2D Interaction Diagram
 Convert to 3D
 Fragments
 Find Bioisostere
 Molcart
 Calculate Properties
 Standardize Table
 Annotate
 Align/Color by 2D Scaffold
 Formal Charges
 Torsion Analysis
 Torsion Free Strain
 Enumerate Formal Charge States
 Protonation vs pH
 Convert
 Build Prediction Model
 Predict
 Generate 3D Conformers
 Generate Tautomers
 Generate Stereoisomers
 Prodrug
 Ligand Energetics
 Cluster Set
 PCA Analysis
 Visualize Chemical Space
 Compare Two Sets
 Merge Two Sets
 Select Duplicates
 MPO
 Combinatorial Chemistry
 SAR Analysis
 Chemical Superposition
 APF Tools
Learn and Predict
Docking
Virtual Screening
Molecular Dynamics
MolScreen
3D Ligand Editor
Tables and Plots
Local Databases
ICM-Scarab
KNIME
Tutorials
FAQs
 
Index
PrevICM User's Guide
10.17 Calculate Torsion Free Strain
Next

Torsion Free Strain Calculation

Torsion Free Strain Calculation

Overview

A new function has been introduced to calculate the Torsion Free Strain, which combines torsional strain and an entropy-based component derived from statistical profiles. This allows users to assess how favorable a torsion is based on known conformational preferences.

Theory

The FreeStrain is derived from statistical torsion profiles. For each torsion in a molecule, a probability is calculated based on the torsion's current value and its corresponding position in the profile:

Probability_Tors[i] = Sum( prof[k] * Exp(-d*d) )

Where:

  • k ranges from 1 to 36 (corresponding to 10-degree bins over 360 degrees)
  • d is the distance in bins between the current torsion angle and bin k

The cumulative torsional free strain is then calculated as:

Free_Strain = -Sum( Log(Probability_Tors[i]) )

A lower value indicates a more favorable (less strained) conformation.

Note: This method incorporates an entropy component. For example, if there are three equivalent minima, being confined to one of them incurs an entropy penalty for locking out the other two.

A note about cutoffs values for Free Strain: When considering cutoff values, it is usually not helpful to impose a strict threshold without looking at the context. Different targets naturally accommodate ligands of different sizes. Larger ligands tend to have more rotatable bonds, higher entropic penalties and greater cumulative strain. Smaller molecules often fall in the range of 3 to 5 and usually stay below about 8. Larger ligands may be around 6 to 9 and typically remain below roughly 12, but these numbers are only general guidelines. It is more effective to use these values to prioritize your results rather than to enforce a hard cutoff. For example, you can filter out the lowest-scoring quarter or half of the list to focus on the stronger candidates.

Graphical Interface (GUI) Access

This functionality is also accessible via the graphical user interface:

Chemistry > Calculate Torsion Free Strain

Selecting this option will compute and display the torsional free strain for the selected molecule(s) based on current conformations.

New Shell Function

A new shell function is available for use in scripts:

Score( <X_3Dn> torsion ) -> <R_n_free_strain>

Input: A set of 3D molecules with defined torsions
Output: A vector of torsion free strain values

This function evaluates each torsion in the molecule using the statistical profiles as described above and returns a cumulative strain score that includes entropy considerations.


Prev
Torsion Analysis
Home
Up
Next
Enumerate Formal Charge States

Copyright© 1989-2025, Molsoft,LLC - All Rights Reserved.
This document contains proprietary and confidential information of Molsoft, LLC.
The content of this document may not be disclosed to third parties, copied or duplicated in any form,
in whole or in part, without the prior written permission from Molsoft, LLC.