133 research outputs found
Targeting the Hsp90 interactome using in silico polypharmacology approaches
In recent years, polypharmacology has gained popularity in drug discovery. [1] Especially for complex diseases such as cancer, the ability of a drug to bind to and interfere with multiple targets provides new opportunities for therapeutic intervention In this article, we focus on Hsp90 and its interactome, whose pivotal role in survival and proliferation of cancer cells renders this array of targets particularly attractive polypharmacological drug design strategies.
The primary goal of our work is the identification and selection of suitable target proteins from the interactome that might be combined with Hsp90 to explore and exploit a multi-target inhibition approach. This task is accomplished by applying computational methods to mine the structural and biological information associated with potential ligands in public databases and assess the degree of structural similarity between known inhibitors of different targets. Therefore, we propose an integrated ligand- and structure-based approach to select small molecules from databases suitable for consideration as multi-target inhibitors
Design of chemical space networks incorporating compound distance relationships
Networks, in which nodes represent compounds and edges pairwise similarity relationships, are used as coordinate-free representations of chemical space. So-called chemical space networks (CSNs) provide intuitive access to structural relationships within compound data sets and can be annotated with activity information. However, in such similarity-based networks, distances between compounds are typically determined for layout purposes and clarity and have no chemical meaning. By contrast, inter-compound distances as a measure of dissimilarity can be directly obtained from coordinate-based representations of chemical space. Herein, we introduce a CSN variant that incorporates compound distance relationships and thus further increases the information content of compound networks. The design was facilitated by adapting the Kamada-Kawai algorithm. Kamada-Kawai networks are the first CSNs that are based on numerical similarity measures, but do not depend on chosen similarity threshold values
The use of 2D fingerprint methods to support the assessment of structural similarity in orphan drug legislation.
In the European Union, medicines are authorised for some rare disease only if they are judged to be dissimilar to authorised orphan drugs for that disease. This paper describes the use of 2D fingerprints to show the extent of the relationship between computed levels of structural similarity for pairs of molecules and expert judgments of the similarities of those pairs. The resulting relationship can be used to provide input to the assessment of new active compounds for which orphan drug authorisation is being sought
Plate-based diversity subset screening generation 2: An improved paradigm for high throughput screening of large compound files
High throughput screening (HTS) is an effective method for lead and probe discovery that is widely used in industry and academia to identify novel chemical matter and to initiate the drug discovery process. However, HTS can be time-consuming and costly and the use of subsets as an efficient alternative to screening these large collections has been investigated. Subsets may be selected on the basis of chemical diversity, molecular properties, biological activity diversity, or biological target focus. Previously we described a novel form of subset screening: plate-based diversity subset (PBDS) screening, in which the screening subset is constructed by plate selection (rather than individual compound cherry-picking), using algorithms that select for compound quality and chemical diversity on a plate basis. In this paper, we describe a second generation approach to the construction of an updated subset: PBDS2, using both plate and individual compound selection, that has an improved coverage of the chemical space of the screening file, whilst only selecting the same number of plates for screening. We describe the validation of PBDS2 and its successful use in hit and lead discovery. PBDS2 screening became the default mode of singleton (one compound per well) HTS for lead discovery in Pfizer
Analysis of structure-selectivity relationships through single- or dual step selectivity searching using 2D molecular fingerprints
Monitoring global growth of activity cliff information over time and assessing activity cliff frequencies and distributions
Comprehensive knowledge base of two- and three-dimensional activity cliffs for medicinal and computational chemistry
Analysis of structure-selectivity relationships through single- or dual step selectivity searching using 2D molecular fingerprints
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