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Automated Inference of Chemical Discriminants of Biological Activity. | LitMetric

Automated Inference of Chemical Discriminants of Biological Activity.

Methods Mol Biol

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology , Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.

Published: January 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ligand-based virtual screening helps identify bioactive small molecules efficiently, making it easier to focus on promising candidates for further testing.
  • Machine learning techniques can analyze the chemical groups of these compounds to reveal patterns that correlate with biological activity, guiding future molecular selection and design.
  • The described machine learning protocols do not require knowledge of the protein's atomic structure and can be adapted to various datasets, exemplified by their application to a dataset of inhibitor candidates for GPCR-mediated signaling.

Article Abstract

Ligand-based virtual screening has become a standard technique for the efficient discovery of bioactive small molecules. Following assays to determine the activity of compounds selected by virtual screening, or other approaches in which dozens to thousands of molecules have been tested, machine learning techniques make it straightforward to discover the patterns of chemical groups that correlate with the desired biological activity. Defining the chemical features that generate activity can be used to guide the selection of molecules for subsequent rounds of screening and assaying, as well as help design new, more active molecules for organic synthesis.The quantitative structure-activity relationship machine learning protocols we describe here, using decision trees, random forests, and sequential feature selection, take as input the chemical structure of a single, known active small molecule (e.g., an inhibitor, agonist, or substrate) for comparison with the structure of each tested molecule. Knowledge of the atomic structure of the protein target and its interactions with the active compound are not required. These protocols can be modified and applied to any data set that consists of a series of measured structural, chemical, or other features for each tested molecule, along with the experimentally measured value of the response variable you would like to predict or optimize for your project, for instance, inhibitory activity in a biological assay or ΔG. To illustrate the use of different machine learning algorithms, we step through the analysis of a dataset of inhibitor candidates from virtual screening that were tested recently for their ability to inhibit GPCR-mediated signaling in a vertebrate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7756-7_16DOI Listing

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