Methods for Effective Virtual Screening and Scaffold-Hopping in Chemical Compounds

Abstract

Methods that can screen large databases to retrieve a structurally diverse set of compounds with desirable bioactivity properties are critical in the drug discovery and development process. This paper presents a set of such methods, which are designed to find compounds that are structurally different to a certain query compound while retaining its bioactivity properties (scaffold hops). These methods utilize various indirect ways of measuring the similarity between the query and a compound that take into account additional information beyond their structure-based similarities. Two sets of techniques are presented that capture these indirect similarities using approaches based on automatic relevance feedback and on analyzing the similarity network formed by the query and the database compounds. Experimental evaluation shows that many of these methods substantially outperform previously developed approaches both in terms of their ability to identify structurally diverse active compounds as well as active compounds in general.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 04, 2007
Accession Number
ADA467533

Entities

People

  • George Karypis
  • Ian A. Watson
  • Nikil Wale

Organizations

  • University of Minnesota

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Algorithms
  • Automatic
  • Chemical Compounds
  • Clustering
  • Computer Science
  • Computers
  • Databases
  • Equations
  • Feedback
  • Information Retrieval
  • Information Science
  • Lead Compounds
  • Precision
  • Small Molecules
  • Social Networks
  • Standards

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Agricultural Chemistry/Soil Science
  • Computer Vision.
  • Distributed Systems and Data Platform Development