Most cited article - PubMed ID 24655571
Molpher: a software framework for systematic chemical space exploration
Many contemporary cheminformatics methods, including computer-aided de novo drug design, hold promise to significantly accelerate and reduce the cost of drug discovery. Thanks to this attractive outlook, the field has thrived and in the past few years has seen an especially significant growth, mainly due to the emergence of novel methods based on deep neural networks. This growth is also apparent in the development of novel de novo drug design methods with many new generative algorithms now available. However, widespread adoption of new generative techniques in the fields like medicinal chemistry or chemical biology is still lagging behind the most recent developments. Upon taking a closer look, this fact is not surprising since in order to successfully integrate the most recent de novo drug design methods in existing processes and pipelines, a close collaboration between diverse groups of experimental and theoretical scientists needs to be established. Therefore, to accelerate the adoption of both modern and traditional de novo molecular generators, we developed Generator User Interface (GenUI), a software platform that makes it possible to integrate molecular generators within a feature-rich graphical user interface that is easy to use by experts of diverse backgrounds. GenUI is implemented as a web service and its interfaces offer access to cheminformatics tools for data preprocessing, model building, molecule generation, and interactive chemical space visualization. Moreover, the platform is easy to extend with customizable frontend React.js components and backend Python extensions. GenUI is open source and a recently developed de novo molecular generator, DrugEx, was integrated as a proof of principle. In this work, we present the architecture and implementation details of GenUI and discuss how it can facilitate collaboration in the disparate communities interested in de novo molecular generation and computer-aided drug discovery.
- Keywords
- De novo drug design, Deep learning, Graphical user interface, Molecule generation, Web application,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Pointwise mutual information (PMI) is a measure of association used in information theory. In this paper, PMI is used to characterize several publicly available databases (DrugBank, ChEMBL, PubChem and ZINC) in terms of association strength between compound structural features resulting in database PMI interrelation profiles. As structural features, substructure fragments obtained by coding individual compounds as MACCS, PubChemKey and ECFP fingerprints are used. The analysis of publicly available databases reveals, in accord with other studies, unusual properties of DrugBank compounds which further confirms the validity of PMI profiling approach. Z-standardized relative feature tightness (ZRFT), a PMI-derived measure that quantifies how well the given compound's feature combinations fit these in a particular compound set, is applied for the analysis of compound synthetic accessibility (SA), as well as for the classification of compounds as easy (ES) and hard (HS) to synthesize. ZRFT value distributions are compared with these of SYBA and SAScore. The analysis of ZRFT values of structurally complex compounds in the SAVI database reveals oligopeptide structures that are mispredicted by SAScore as HS, while correctly predicted by ZRFT and SYBA as ES. Compared to SAScore, SYBA and random forest, ZRFT predictions are less accurate, though by a narrow margin (AccZRFT = 94.5%, AccSYBA = 98.8%, AccSAScore = 99.0%, AccRF = 97.3%). However, ZRFT ability to distinguish between ES and HS compounds is surprisingly high considering that while SYBA, SAScore and random forest are dedicated SA models, ZRFT is a generic measurement that merely quantifies the strength of interrelations between structural feature pairs. The results presented in the current work indicate that structural feature co-occurrence, quantified by PMI or ZRFT, contains a significant amount of information relevant to physico-chemical properties of organic compounds.
- Keywords
- Hashed fingerprint, Information theory, Pointwise mutual information, Structural key, Synthetic accessibility,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
SYBA (SYnthetic Bayesian Accessibility) is a fragment-based method for the rapid classification of organic compounds as easy- (ES) or hard-to-synthesize (HS). It is based on a Bernoulli naïve Bayes classifier that is used to assign SYBA score contributions to individual fragments based on their frequencies in the database of ES and HS molecules. SYBA was trained on ES molecules available in the ZINC15 database and on HS molecules generated by the Nonpher methodology. SYBA was compared with a random forest, that was utilized as a baseline method, as well as with other two methods for synthetic accessibility assessment: SAScore and SCScore. When used with their suggested thresholds, SYBA improves over random forest classification, albeit marginally, and outperforms SAScore and SCScore. However, upon the optimization of SAScore threshold (that changes from 6.0 to - 4.5), SAScore yields similar results as SYBA. Because SYBA is based merely on fragment contributions, it can be used for the analysis of the contribution of individual molecular parts to compound synthetic accessibility. SYBA is publicly available at https://github.com/lich-uct/syba under the GNU General Public License.
- Keywords
- Bayesian analysis, Bernoulli naïve Bayes, Synthetic accessibility,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Structure generators are widely used in de novo design studies and their performance substantially influences an outcome. Approaches based on the deep learning models and conventional atom-based approaches may result in invalid structures and fail to address their synthetic feasibility issues. On the other hand, conventional reaction-based approaches result in synthetically feasible compounds but novelty and diversity of generated compounds may be limited. Fragment-based approaches can provide both better novelty and diversity of generated compounds but the issue of synthetic complexity of generated structure was not explicitly addressed before. Here we developed a new framework of fragment-based structure generation that, by design, results in the chemically valid structures and provides flexible control over diversity, novelty, synthetic complexity and chemotypes of generated compounds. The framework was implemented as an open-source Python module and can be used to create custom workflows for the exploration of chemical space.
- Keywords
- De novo design, De novo structure generation, Matched molecular pairs,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
In cheminformatics, machine learning methods are typically used to classify chemical compounds into distinctive classes such as active/nonactive or toxic/nontoxic. To train a classifier, a training data set must consist of examples from both positive and negative classes. While a biological activity or toxicity can be experimentally measured, another important molecular property, a synthetic feasibility, is a more abstract feature that can't be easily assessed. In the present paper, we introduce Nonpher, a computational method for the construction of a hard-to-synthesize virtual library. Nonpher is based on a molecular morphing algorithm in which new structures are iteratively generated by simple structural changes, such as the addition or removal of an atom or a bond. In Nonpher, molecular morphing was optimized so that it yields structures not overly complex, but just right hard-to-synthesize. Nonpher results were compared with SAscore and dense region (DR), other two methods for the generation of hard-to-synthesize compounds. Random forest classifier trained on Nonpher data achieves better results than models obtained using SAscore and DR data.
- Keywords
- Molecular complexity, Molecular morphing, Synthetic feasibility,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
BACKGROUND: Visualization of large molecular datasets is a challenging yet important topic utilised in diverse fields of chemistry ranging from material engineering to drug design. Especially in drug design, modern methods of high-throughput screening generate large amounts of molecular data that call for methods enabling their analysis. One such method is classification of compounds based on their molecular scaffolds, a concept widely used by medicinal chemists to group molecules of similar properties. This classification can then be utilized for intuitive visualization of compounds. RESULTS: In this paper, we propose a scaffold hierarchy as a result of large-scale analysis of the PubChem Compound database. The analysis not only provided insights into scaffold diversity of the PubChem Compound database, but also enables scaffold-based hierarchical visualization of user compound data sets on the background of empirical chemical space, as defined by the PubChem data, or on the background of any other user-defined data set. The visualization is performed by a web based client-server application called Scaffvis. It provides an interactive zoomable tree map visualization of data sets up to hundreds of thousands molecules. Scaffvis is free to use and its source codes have been published under an open source license.Graphical abstract.
- Keywords
- Chemical space, Pubchem, Scaffold, Treemap, Visualization,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH