Literature DB >> 19434823

Analysis of neighborhood behavior in lead optimization and array design.

George Papadatos1, Anthony W J Cooper, Visakan Kadirkamanathan, Simon J F Macdonald, Iain M McLay, Stephen D Pickett, John M Pritchard, Peter Willett, Valerie J Gillet.   

Abstract

Neighborhood behavior describes the extent to which small structural changes defined by a molecular descriptor are likely to lead to small property changes. This study evaluates two methods for the quantification of neighborhood behavior: the optimal diagonal method of Patterson et al. and the optimality criterion method of Horvath and Jeandenans. The methods are evaluated using twelve different types of fingerprint (both 2D and 3D) with screening data derived from several lead optimization projects at GlaxoSmithKline. The principal focus of the work is the design of chemical arrays during lead optimization, and the study hence considers not only biological activity but also important drug properties such as metabolic stability, permeability, and lipophilicity. Evidence is provided to suggest that the optimality criterion method may provide a better quantitative description of neighborhood behavior than the optimal diagonal method.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19434823     DOI: 10.1021/ci800302g

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Inf Model        ISSN: 1549-9596            Impact factor:   4.956


  4 in total

1.  Multi-task generative topographic mapping in virtual screening.

Authors:  Arkadii Lin; Dragos Horvath; Gilles Marcou; Bernd Beck; Alexandre Varnek
Journal:  J Comput Aided Mol Des       Date:  2019-02-09       Impact factor: 3.686

2.  Local neighborhood behavior in a combinatorial library context.

Authors:  Dragos Horvath; Christian Koch; Gisbert Schneider; Gilles Marcou; Alexandre Varnek
Journal:  J Comput Aided Mol Des       Date:  2011-02-12       Impact factor: 3.686

3.  Comparing structural fingerprints using a literature-based similarity benchmark.

Authors:  Noel M O'Boyle; Roger A Sayle
Journal:  J Cheminform       Date:  2016-07-05       Impact factor: 5.514

4.  QSAR-derived affinity fingerprints (part 1): fingerprint construction and modeling performance for similarity searching, bioactivity classification and scaffold hopping.

Authors:  C Škuta; I Cortés-Ciriano; W Dehaen; P Kříž; G J P van Westen; I V Tetko; A Bender; D Svozil
Journal:  J Cheminform       Date:  2020-05-29       Impact factor: 5.514

  4 in total

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