Quantitative Structure-Activity/Property Relationships (QSAR/QSPR) models have been largely used for different kind of problems in Medicinal Chemistry and other Biosciences as well. Nevertheless, the applications of QSAR models have been restricted to the study of small molecules in the past. In this context, many authors use molecular graphs, atoms (nodes) connected by chemical bonds (links) to represent and numerically characterize the molecular structure. On the other hand, Complex Networks are useful in solving problems in drug research and industry, developing mathematical representations of different systems. These systems move in a wide range from relatively simple graph representations of drug molecular structures (molecular graphs used in classic QSAR) to large systems. We can cite for instance, drug-target interaction networks, protein structure networks, protein interaction networks (PINs), or drug treatment in large geographical disease spreading networks. In any case, all complex networks have essentially the same components: nodes (atoms, drugs, proteins, microorganisms and/or parasites, geographical areas, drug policy legislations, etc.) and links (chemical bonds, drug-target interactions, drug-parasite treatment, drug use, etc.). Consequently, we can use the same type of numeric parameters called Topological Indices (TIs) to describe the connectivity patterns in all these kinds of Complex Networks irrespective the nature of the object they represent and use these TIs to develop QSAR/QSPR models beyond the classic frontiers of drugs small-sized molecules. The goal of this work, in first instance, is to offer a common background to all the manuscripts presented in this special issue. In so doing, we make a review of the most used software and databases, common types of QSAR/QSPR models, and complex networks involving drugs or their targets. In addition, we review both classic TIs that have been used to describe the molecular structure of drugs and/or larger complex networks. In second instance, we use for the first time a Markov chain model to generalize Spectral moments to higher order analogues coined here as the Stochastic Spectral Moments TIs of order k (πk). Lastly, we report for the first time different QSAR/QSPR models for different classes of networks found in drug research, nature, technology, and social-legal sciences using πk values. This work updates our previous reviews Gonzalez-Diaz et al. Curr Top Med Chem. 2007; 7(10): 1015-29 and Gonzalez-Diaz et al. Curr Top Med Chem. 2008; 8(18):1676-90. It has been prepared in response to the kind invitation of the editor Prof. AB Reitz in commemoration of the 10th anniversary of this journal in 2010.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/156802612800166819 | DOI Listing |
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
January 2025
Department of Mathematics, Western University, London, ON N6A 3K7, Canada.
We study image segmentation using spatiotemporal dynamics in a recurrent neural network where the state of each unit is given by a complex number. We show that this network generates sophisticated spatiotemporal dynamics that can effectively divide an image into groups according to a scene's structural characteristics. We then demonstrate a simple algorithm for object segmentation that generalizes across inputs ranging from simple geometric objects in grayscale images to natural images.
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January 2025
Department of Biostatistics and Health Data Science, School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading dementia among the elderly with complex origins. Despite extensive investigation into the AD-associated protein-coding genes, the involvement of noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) and posttranscriptional modification (PTM) in AD pathogenesis remains unclear. Here, we comprehensively characterized the landscape of ncRNAs and PTM events in 1460 samples across six brain regions sourced from the Mount Sinai/JJ Peters VA Medical Center Brain Bank Study and Mayo cohorts, encompassing 33,321 long ncRNAs, 92,897 enhancer RNAs, 53,763 alternative polyadenylation events, and 900,221 A-to-I RNA editing events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
January 2025
Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California, Irvine, California 92617, USA.
We propose a novel approach to investigate the brain mechanisms that support coordination of behavior between individuals. Brain states in single individuals defined by the patterns of functional connectivity between brain regions are used to create joint symbolic representations of brain states in two or more individuals to investigate symbolic dynamics that are related to interactive behaviors. We apply this approach to electroencephalographic data from pairs of subjects engaged in two different modes of finger-tapping coordination tasks (synchronization and syncopation) under different interaction conditions (uncoupled, leader-follower, and mutual) to explore the neural mechanisms of multi-person motor coordination.
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January 2025
International Research Center for Neurointelligence, The University of Tokyo Institutes for Advanced Study, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo Ku, Tokyo 113 8654, Japan.
We investigate the aging transition in networks of excitable and self-oscillatory units as the fraction of inherently excitable units increases. Two network topologies are considered: a scale-free network with weighted pairwise interactions and a two-dimensional simplicial complex with weighted scale-free pairwise and triadic interactions. Without triadic interactions, the aging transition from collective oscillations to oscillation death (inhomogeneous stationary states) can occur either suddenly or through an intermediate state of partial oscillation.
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January 2025
Department of Management Science and Technology, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8579, Japan.
Complex network approaches have been emerging as an analysis tool for dynamical systems. Different reconstruction methods from time series have been shown to reveal complicated behaviors that can be quantified from the network's topology. Directed recurrence networks have recently been suggested as one such method, complementing the already successful recurrence networks and expanding the applications of recurrence analysis.
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