Literature DB >> 25044981

Design of a general-purpose European compound screening library for EU-OPENSCREEN.

Dragos Horvath1, Michael Lisurek, Bernd Rupp, Ronald Kühne, Edgar Specker, Jens von Kries, Didier Rognan, C David Andersson, Fredrik Almqvist, Mikael Elofsson, Per-Anders Enqvist, Anna-Lena Gustavsson, Nikita Remez, Jordi Mestres, Gilles Marcou, Alexander Varnek, Marcel Hibert, Jordi Quintana, Ronald Frank.   

Abstract

This work describes a collaborative effort to define and apply a protocol for the rational selection of a general-purpose screening library, to be used by the screening platforms affiliated with the EU-OPENSCREEN initiative. It is designed as a standard source of compounds for primary screening against novel biological targets, at the request of research partners. Given the general nature of the potential applications of this compound collection, the focus of the selection strategy lies on ensuring chemical stability, absence of reactive compounds, screening-compliant physicochemical properties, loose compliance to drug-likeness criteria (as drug design is a major, but not exclusive application), and maximal diversity/coverage of chemical space, aimed at providing hits for a wide spectrum of drugable targets. Finally, practical availability/cost issues cannot be avoided. The main goal of this publication is to inform potential future users of this library about its conception, sources, and characteristics. The outline of the selection procedure, notably of the filtering rules designed by a large committee of European medicinal chemists and chemoinformaticians, may be of general methodological interest for the screening/medicinal chemistry community. The selection task of 200K molecules out of a pre-filtered set of 1.4M candidates was shared by five independent European research groups, each picking a subset of 40K compounds according to their own in-house methodology and expertise. An in-depth analysis of chemical space coverage of the library serves not only to characterize the collection, but also to compare the various chemoinformatics-driven selection procedures of maximal diversity sets. Compound selections contributed by various participating groups were mapped onto general-purpose self-organizing maps (SOMs) built on the basis of marketed drugs and bioactive reference molecules. In this way, the occupancy of chemical space by the EU-OPENSCREEN library could be directly compared with distributions of known bioactives of various classes. This mapping highlights the relevance of the selection and shows how the consensus reached by merging the five different 40K selections contributes to achieve this relevance. The approach also allows one to readily identify subsets of target- or target-class-oriented compounds from the EU-OPENSCREEN library to suit the needs of the diverse range of potential users. The final EU-OPENSCREEN library, assembled by merging five independent selections of 40K compounds from various expert groups, represents an excellent example of a Europe-wide collaborative effort toward the common objective of building best-in-class European open screening platforms.
© 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Keywords:  EU-OPENSCREEN; chemical space mapping; commercial compound selection; library design; molecular diversity; self-organizing maps

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25044981     DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201402126

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ChemMedChem        ISSN: 1860-7179            Impact factor:   3.466


  7 in total

1.  Mappability of drug-like space: towards a polypharmacologically competent map of drug-relevant compounds.

Authors:  Pavel Sidorov; Helena Gaspar; Gilles Marcou; Alexandre Varnek; Dragos Horvath
Journal:  J Comput Aided Mol Des       Date:  2015-11-12       Impact factor: 3.686

2.  Development and Testing of Druglike Screening Libraries.

Authors:  Junmei Wang; Yubin Ge; Xiang-Qun Xie
Journal:  J Chem Inf Model       Date:  2019-01-03       Impact factor: 4.956

3.  The Use of Informer Sets in Screening: Perspectives on an Efficient Strategy to Identify New Probes.

Authors:  Paul A Clemons; Joshua A Bittker; Florence F Wagner; Allison Hands; Vlado Dančík; Stuart L Schreiber; Amit Choudhary; Bridget K Wagner
Journal:  SLAS Discov       Date:  2021-06-16       Impact factor: 3.341

4.  EU-OPENSCREEN-chemical tools for the study of plant biology and resistance mechanisms.

Authors:  Torsten Meiners; Bahne Stechmann; Ronald Frank
Journal:  J Chem Biol       Date:  2014-07-31

5.  Antibacterial Evaluation and Virtual Screening of New Thiazolyl-Triazole Schiff Bases as Potential DNA-Gyrase Inhibitors.

Authors:  Cristina Nastasă; Dan C Vodnar; Ioana Ionuţ; Anca Stana; Daniela Benedec; Radu Tamaian; Ovidiu Oniga; Brînduşa Tiperciuc
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2018-01-11       Impact factor: 5.923

6.  EU-OPENSCREEN: A Novel Collaborative Approach to Facilitate Chemical Biology.

Authors:  Philip Brennecke; Dace Rasina; Oscar Aubi; Katja Herzog; Johannes Landskron; Bastien Cautain; Francisca Vicente; Jordi Quintana; Jordi Mestres; Bahne Stechmann; Bernhard Ellinger; Jose Brea; Jacek L Kolanowski; Radosław Pilarski; Mar Orzaez; Antonio Pineda-Lucena; Luca Laraia; Faranak Nami; Piotr Zielenkiewicz; Kamil Paruch; Espen Hansen; Jens P von Kries; Martin Neuenschwander; Edgar Specker; Petr Bartunek; Sarka Simova; Zbigniew Leśnikowski; Stefan Krauss; Lari Lehtiö; Ursula Bilitewski; Mark Brönstrup; Kjetil Taskén; Aigars Jirgensons; Heiko Lickert; Mads H Clausen; Jeanette H Andersen; Maria J Vicent; Olga Genilloud; Aurora Martinez; Marc Nazaré; Wolfgang Fecke; Philip Gribbon
Journal:  SLAS Discov       Date:  2019-01-07       Impact factor: 3.341

Review 7.  Unraveling Plant Natural Chemical Diversity for Drug Discovery Purposes.

Authors:  Emmanuelle Lautié; Olivier Russo; Pierre Ducrot; Jean A Boutin
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2020-04-07       Impact factor: 5.810

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.