| Literature DB >> 29234984 |
Samo Lešnik1, Blaž Škrlj1,2, Nika Eržen1, Urban Bren1,3,4, Stanislav Gobec5, Janez Konc6,7,8, Dušanka Janežič9.
Abstract
We describe a novel freely available web server Base of Bioisosterically Exchangeable Replacements (BoBER), which implements an interface to a database of bioisosteric and scaffold hopping replacements. Bioisosterism and scaffold hopping are key concepts in drug design and optimization, and can be defined as replacements of biologically active compound's fragments with other fragments to improve activity, reduce toxicity, change bioavailability or to diversify the scaffold space. Our web server enables fast and user-friendly searches for bioisosteric and scaffold replacements which were obtained by mining the whole Protein Data Bank. The working of the web server is presented on an existing MurF inhibitor as example. BoBER web server enables medicinal chemists to quickly search for and get new and unique ideas about possible bioisosteric or scaffold hopping replacements that could be used to improve hit or lead drug-like compounds.Entities:
Keywords: Bioisosteres; Ligand fragments; ProBiS; Protein superimposition; Scaffold hopping
Year: 2017 PMID: 29234984 PMCID: PMC5727005 DOI: 10.1186/s13321-017-0251-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cheminform ISSN: 1758-2946 Impact factor: 5.514
The details of the Loose and Rigorous filtering options
| Loose filtering | Rigorous filtering | |
|---|---|---|
| Bioisosteric fragment pair is from the same SCOP family | Both (inter- and intra-family) | Intra-family |
| Interchangeability of similar join atom types | Irrelevanta | Non-interchangeable join atom types |
| Consideration of join atoms | Use structures with common core as queries (ignore join atoms) | Use specific structure as query (consider join atoms) |
aJoin atoms are ignored when the option Use structures with common core as queries is enabled
Fig. 1MurF enzyme inhibitor. Fragments we wish to replace are highlighted with blue (morpholine), purple (dichlorobenzene) and green (benzothiophene)
Fig. 2Workflow of the BoBER web server usage
Possible structures with bioisosteric replacements found using BoBER
| Replacement number | Original fragment | Bioisostere found by BoBER | Similar bioisostere found by SwissBioisostere |
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Original join atoms are shown, however in 2 and 3 they were ignored during the procedure, as per usage of the Loose filtering option
Fig. 3A bioisosteric version of MurF enzyme inhibitor from Fig. 1. All the replacements from Table 2 were performed sequentially, one fragment at a time. Each time, the SMILES of the resulting bioisosteric compound with one of the fragments replaced was copied to a new search tab, and the procedure was repeated for the next fragment. Bioisosteric fragments are highlighted using the same colors as the original fragments in Fig. 1 which are replaced