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Targeting Drug-like properties in Chemical Libraries

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Title: Targeting Drug-like properties in Chemical Libraries


1
Targeting Drug-like properties in Chemical
Libraries
  • David Winkler, Frank Burden, Mitchell Polley
  • Centre for Complexity in Drug Design
  • CSIRO Molecular Science and
  • Chemistry Department, Monash University

VICS
2
Complexity in Drug Design Group
  • Prof. Frank Burden - Scimetrics Ltd -consultant
    to CSIRO
  • Dr. Mitchell Polley - CSS postdoctoral fellow
  • Darryl Jones - CSS PhD top-up student - Flinders
    University (Physics)
  • Prof. Dave Winkler - CSIRO Molecular Science and
    Monash University/VICS

3
Overview of Project
  • Aims to develop a method for evolving a chemical
    library of heterogeneous agents (molecules) using
    'drug-like' fitness functions
  • Chemical space is vast (gt1080 possibilities)
  • Method must explore drug-like chemical space and
    identify islands of activity and novelty
  • Application in the discovery of novel bioactive
    agents such as drugs, crop care products
  • Methodology applicable to design of new materials
    and nanomachines using different fitness functions

4
Overview of Project
  • Steps
  • Devise sparse, informative mathematical
    representations of molecules
  • Devise sparse methods of selecting these for
    models
  • Use agent-based methods (Bayesian neural nets) to
    map representations to properties and use models
    as fitness functions
  • Develop methods for evolving chemicals using
    mutation operators so that maximum chemical space
    can be traversed
  • Evolve chemical libraries using drug-like fitness
    functions

5
Highlights
  • Representations
  • Novel charge fingerprint descriptor devised and
    tested
  • Theory of eigenvalue descriptors cracked
  • momentum space descriptor work started
  • Novel selectivity index developed

6
Sparse Descriptors
  • Many thousands of descriptors have been devised
    (e.g. CoMFA fields, DRAGON)
  • Many are highly correlated with other descriptors
    - contain the same information
  • Some (e.g. molecular weight) are information-poor
  • Models using sparse descriptors can be more
    predictive
  • We work to the premise that it is possible to
    devise sparse, information-rich descriptors from
    which suitable subsets could be drawn for a wide
    variety of modelling problems

7
Charge fingerprints
  • These are widely applicable, easily computed
    descriptors calculated by binning charges on
    atoms in different environments

8
EEM-based property descriptors
  • Density Functional Theory (DFT) proposes that
    knowledge of electron density allows computation
    of many other properties
  • Electronegativity equalization methods (Mortier,
    Bultinck and others) is a rapid, approximate DFT
    method
  • All work to date has concentrated on charges or a
    few other observables.
  • Main strength will probably lie with calculation
    of other molecular properties, when method is
    generalized and parameterized for more atom types

9
Generalized eigenvalue matrices
10
Why do eigenvalue descriptors work?
Eigenvalue matrix
EEM matrix
AT TL \ A TLT' A-1 TL-1 T' since T'T-1
for an orthogonal transformation i.e. inverse of
A is related to the eigenvalues
11
Momentum space descriptors
  • the more interesting part of the electron density
    distribution in terms of biological activity is
    located near to the k-space origin. The
    corresponding r-space density distribution is
    associated with the outermost valence regions of
    the molecule
  • k-space descriptions of electron density are more
    compact and simpler

12
Optimum Selectivity Index So
13
Highlights
  • Sparse feature selection
  • Automatic Relevance Determination (ARD) method
    refined
  • Sparse Bayesian feature detection theory mastered
  • Linear sparse feature detection using an EM
    algorithm and Jeffrey's prior
  • Nonlinear Bayesian feature detection achieved but
    needs more work
  • Novel variable selection when number of
    descriptors is much larger than the number of
    molecules in the data set

14
Sparse Bayesian variable selection
Descriptor
15
Highlights
  • Optimum nonlinear modelling
  • Bayesian regularized neural networks working well
  • Linear sparse feature detection and modelling
  • Nonlinear Bayesian feature detection and
    modelling using radial basis function regression
  • Use of sparse Bayesian methods in neural networks
    under study

16
Highlights
  • Models built
  • Blood-brain barrier partitioning
  • Drug intestinal absorption
  • Acute toxicity
  • Phase II metabolism - substrates and inhibitors
    (Flinders medical school collaboration) - SVM
  • Several drug target models - e.g. farnesyl
    transferase

17
Blood-brain barrier model
Topological descriptors- 3 hidden nodes Training
set 85 compounds, test set 21 compounds
18
Intestinal absorption QSAR model
Property-based descriptors- 5 hidden nodes-
optimum model
19
Acute toxicity model
Burden index/binned charge descriptors 8 hidden
nodes Training set 450 compounds, external test
set 53 compounds
20
Using SVM and EEM descriptors to model phase II
metabolism
21
COX 1 and 2 QSAR and selectivity
  • Built QSAR model for cyclooxygenase 1 and 2, and
    S0 using a large data set from Tom Stockfisch at
    Accelrys (454 compounds obtained from
    http//www.accelrys.com/references/datasets/)
  • Used atomistic (A), Burden eigenvalue (B) and
    charge fingerprint (C) descriptors together with
    a Bayesian regularized neural net to build model
  • Compared MLR with a Bayesian neural net with 3
    nodes in the hidden layer

22
COX 1 and 2 QSAR and selectivity
Selectivity of cyclooxygenase 1 and 2 inhibitors
23
Selectivity Index So QSAR Model
MLR R20.77 Q20.69
BRANN (3 nodes) R20.92 Q20.74
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