Activity-Aware Clustering of High Throughput Screening Data and Elucidation of Orthogonal Structure-Activity Relationships

被引:16
|
作者
Lounkine, Eugen [1 ]
Nigsch, Florian [2 ]
Jenkins, Jeremy L. [1 ]
Glick, Meir [1 ]
机构
[1] Novartis Inst Biomed Res, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Novartis Inst Biomed Res, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland
关键词
ADVERSE DRUG-REACTIONS; MOLECULAR SIMILARITY; IDENTIFICATION; FINGERPRINTS; PERFORMANCE; ENRICHMENT;
D O I
10.1021/ci2004994
中图分类号
R914 [药物化学];
学科分类号
100701 ;
摘要
From a medicinal chemistry point of view, one of the primary goals of high throughput screening (HTS) hit list assessment is the identification of chemotypes with an informative structure-activity relationship (SAR). Such chemotypes may enable optimization of the primary potency, as well as selectivity and phamacokinetic properties. A common way to prioritize them is molecular clustering of the hits. Typical clustering techniques, however, rely on a general notion of chemical similarity or standard rules of scaffold decomposition and are thus insensitive to molecular features that are enriched in biologically active compounds. This hinders SAR analysis, because compounds sharing the same pharmacophore might not end up in the same cluster and thus are not directly compared to each other by the medicinal chemist. Similarly, common chemotypes that are not related to activity may contaminate clusters, distracting from important chemical motifs. We combined molecular similarity and Bayesian models and introduce (I) a robust, activity-aware clustering approach and (II) a feature mapping method for the elucidation of distinct SAR determinants in polypharmacologic compounds. We evaluated the method on 462 dose-response assays from the Pubchem Bioassay repository. Activity-aware clustering grouped compounds sharing molecular cores that were specific for the target or pathway at hand, rather than grouping inactive scaffolds commonly found in compound series. Many of these core structures we also found in literature that discussed SARs of the respective targets. A numerical comparison of cores allowed for identification of the structural prerequisites for polypharmacology, i.e., distinct bioactive regions within a single compound, and pointed toward selectivity-conferring medchem strategies. The method presented here is generally applicable to any type of activity data and may help bridge the gap between hit list assessment and designing a medchem strategy.
引用
收藏
页码:3158 / 3168
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Structure-activity relationships of nitrofuran derivatives with antibacterial activity
    Pires, JR
    Giesbrecht, A
    Gomes, SL
    do-Amaral, AT
    MOLECULAR MODELING AND PREDICTION OF BIOACTIVITY, 2000, : 290 - 291
  • [32] Structure-activity relationships of protoberberines having antimicrobial activity
    Iwasa, K
    Nanba, H
    Lee, DU
    Kang, SI
    PLANTA MEDICA, 1998, 64 (08) : 748 - 751
  • [33] Structure-activity relationships of imperialine derivatives and their anticholinergic activity
    Atta-ur-Rahman
    Choudhary, MI
    Farooq, A
    Anjum, S
    Baumgold, J
    Sener, B
    PLANTA MEDICA, 1998, 64 (02) : 172 - 174
  • [34] An Insight into the Hepatoprotective Activity and Structure-activity Relationships of Flavonoids
    Majee, Chandana
    Mazumder, Rupa
    Choudhary, Alka N.
    MINI-REVIEWS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2023, 23 (02) : 131 - 149
  • [35] Antibacterial activity and structure-activity relationships of berberine analogs
    Iwasa, K
    Kamigauchi, M
    Ueki, M
    Taniguchi, M
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 1996, 31 (06) : 469 - 478
  • [36] Structure-activity relationships of phosphocholine esters for anticancer activity
    Buchfellner, Matthew
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 255
  • [37] Antimalarial activity and structure-activity relationships of protoberberine alkaloids
    Iwasa, K
    Kim, HS
    Wataya, Y
    Lee, DU
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 1998, 33 (01) : 65 - 69
  • [38] Rapid Scanning Structure-Activity Relationships in Combinatorial Data Sets: Identification of Activity Switches
    Medina-Franco, Jose L.
    Edwards, Bruce S.
    Pinilla, Clemencia
    Appel, Jon R.
    Giulianotti, Marc A.
    Santos, Radleigh G.
    Yongye, Austin B.
    Sklar, Larry A.
    Houghten, Richard A.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING, 2013, 53 (06) : 1475 - 1485
  • [39] Activity-Aware Map: Identifying Human Daily Activity Pattern Using Mobile Phone Data
    Phithakkitnukoon, Santi
    Horanont, Teerayut
    Di Lorenzo, Giusy
    Shibasaki, Ryosuke
    Ratti, Carlo
    HUMAN BEHAVIOR UNDERSTANDING, 2010, 6219 : 14 - +
  • [40] Investigating structure-activity relationships for teratogenicity
    Patel, ML
    Acar-Chiaradia, B
    Marchant, CA
    Greene, N
    BIRTH DEFECTS RESEARCH PART A-CLINICAL AND MOLECULAR TERATOLOGY, 2006, 76 (05) : 388 - 388