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Results of systematic virtual screening calculations using a structural key-type fingerprint are reported for compounds belonging to 14 activity classes added to randomly selected synthetic molecules. For each class, a fingerprint profile was calculated to monitor the relative occupancy of fingerprint bit positions. Consensus bit patterns were determined consisting of all bits that were always set on in compounds belonging to a specific activity class. In virtual screening calculations, scale factors were applied to each consensus bit position in fingerprints of query molecules. This technique, called "fingerprint scaling", effectively increases the weight of consensus bit positions in fingerprint comparisons. Although overall prediction accuracy was satisfactory using unscaled calculations, scaling significantly increased the number of correct predictions but only slightly increased the rate of false positives. These observations suggest that fingerprint scaling is an attractive approach to increase the probability of identifying molecules with similar activity by virtual screening. It requires the availability of a series of related compounds and can be easily applied to any keyed fingerprint representation that associates bit positions with specific molecular features.  相似文献   

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We describe a novel method for ligand-based virtual screening, based on utilizing Self-Organizing Maps (SOM) as a novelty detection device. Novelty detection (or one-class classification) refers to the attempt of identifying patterns that do not belong to the space covered by a given data set. In ligand-based virtual screening, chemical structures perceived as novel lie outside the known activity space and can therefore be discarded from further investigation. In this context, the concept of "novel structure" refers to a compound, which is unlikely to share the activity of the query structures. Compounds not perceived as "novel" are suspected to share the activity of the query structures. Nowadays, various databases contain active structures but access to compounds which have been found to be inactive in a biological assay is limited. This work addresses this problem via novelty detection, which does not require proven inactive compounds. The structures are described by spatial autocorrelation functions weighted by atomic physicochemical properties. Different methods for selecting a subset of targets from a larger set are discussed. A comparison with similarity search based on Daylight fingerprints followed by data fusion is presented. The two methods complement each other to a large extent. In a retrospective screening of the WOMBAT database novelty detection with SOM gave enrichment factors between 105 and 462-an improvement over the similarity search based on Daylight fingerprints between 25% and 100%, when the 100 top ranked structures were considered. Novelty detection with SOM is applicable (1) to improve the retrieval of potentially active compounds also in concert with other virtual screening methods; (2) as a library design tool for discarding a large number of compounds, which are unlikely to possess a given biological activity; and (3) for selecting a small number of potentially active compounds from a large data set.  相似文献   

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