| Literature DB >> 15921457 |
James A Haigh1, Barry T Pickup, J Andrew Grant, Anthony Nicholls.
Abstract
The optimal overlap between two molecular structures is a useful measure of shape similarity. However, it usually requires significant computation. This work describes the design of shape-fingerprints: binary bit strings that encode molecular shape. Standard measures of similarity between two shape-fingerprints are shown to be an excellent surrogate for similarity based on volume overlap but several orders of magnitude faster to compute. Consequently, shape-fingerprints can be used for clustering of large data sets, evaluating the diversity of compound libraries, as descriptors in SAR and as a prescreen for exact shape comparison against large virtual databases. Our results show that a small set of shapes can be used to build these fingerprints and that this set can be applied universally.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15921457 DOI: 10.1021/ci049651v
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Inf Model ISSN: 1549-9596 Impact factor: 4.956