The QSAR Paradigm in Fragment-Based Drug Discovery: From the Virtual Generation of Target Inhibitors to Multi-Scale Modeling

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (14) ◽  
pp. 1357-1374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria V. Kleandrova ◽  
Alejandro Speck-Planche

Fragment-Based Drug Design (FBDD) has established itself as a promising approach in modern drug discovery, accelerating and improving lead optimization, while playing a crucial role in diminishing the high attrition rates at all stages in the drug development process. On the other hand, FBDD has benefited from the application of computational methodologies, where the models derived from the Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationships (QSAR) have become consolidated tools. This mini-review focuses on the evolution and main applications of the QSAR paradigm in the context of FBDD in the last five years. This report places particular emphasis on the QSAR models derived from fragment-based topological approaches to extract physicochemical and/or structural information, allowing to design potentially novel mono- or multi-target inhibitors from relatively large and heterogeneous databases. Here, we also discuss the need to apply multi-scale modeling, to exemplify how different datasets based on target inhibition can be simultaneously integrated and predicted together with other relevant endpoints such as the biological activity against non-biomolecular targets, as well as in vitro and in vivo toxicity and pharmacokinetic properties. In this context, seminal papers are briefly analyzed. As huge amounts of data continue to accumulate in the domains of the chemical, biological and biomedical sciences, it has become clear that drug discovery must be viewed as a multi-scale optimization process. An ideal multi-scale approach should integrate diverse chemical and biological data and also serve as a knowledge generator, enabling the design of potentially optimal chemicals that may become therapeutic agents.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin Tse ◽  
Laksh Aithani ◽  
Mark Anderson ◽  
Jonathan Cardoso-Silva ◽  
Giovanni Cincilla ◽  
...  

<p>The discovery of new antimalarial medicines with novel mechanisms of action is key to combating the problem of increasing resistance to our frontline treatments. The Open Source Malaria (OSM) consortium has been developing compounds ("Series 4") that have potent activity against <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i> and that have been suggested to act through the inhibition of <i>Pf</i>ATP4, an essential membrane ion pump that regulates the parasite’s intracellular Na<sup>+</sup> concentration. The structure of <i>Pf</i>ATP4 is yet to be determined. In the absence of structural information about this target, a public competition was created to develop a model that would allow the prediction of anti-<i>Pf</i>ATP4 activity among Series 4 compounds, thereby reducing project costs associated with the unnecessary synthesis of inactive compounds.</p>In the first round, in 2016, six participants used the open data collated by OSM to develop moderately predictive models using diverse methods. Notably, all submitted models were available to all other participants in real time. Since then further bioactivity data have been acquired and machine learning methods have rapidly developed, so a second round of the competition was undertaken, in 2019, again with freely-donated models that other participants could see. The best-performing models from this second round were used to predict novel inhibitory molecules, of which several were synthesised and evaluated against the parasite. One such compound, containing a motif that the human chemists familiar with this series would have dismissed as ill-advised, was active. The project demonstrated the abilities of new machine learning methods in the prediction of active compounds where there is no biological target structure, frequently the central problem in phenotypic drug discovery. Since all data and participant interactions remain in the public domain, this research project “lives” and may be improved by others.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin Tse ◽  
Laksh Aithani ◽  
Mark Anderson ◽  
Jonathan Cardoso-Silva ◽  
Giovanni Cincilla ◽  
...  

<p>The discovery of new antimalarial medicines with novel mechanisms of action is key to combating the problem of increasing resistance to our frontline treatments. The Open Source Malaria (OSM) consortium has been developing compounds ("Series 4") that have potent activity against <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i> and that have been suggested to act through the inhibition of <i>Pf</i>ATP4, an essential membrane ion pump that regulates the parasite’s intracellular Na<sup>+</sup> concentration. The structure of <i>Pf</i>ATP4 is yet to be determined. In the absence of structural information about this target, a public competition was created to develop a model that would allow the prediction of anti-<i>Pf</i>ATP4 activity among Series 4 compounds, thereby reducing project costs associated with the unnecessary synthesis of inactive compounds.</p>In the first round, in 2016, six participants used the open data collated by OSM to develop moderately predictive models using diverse methods. Notably, all submitted models were available to all other participants in real time. Since then further bioactivity data have been acquired and machine learning methods have rapidly developed, so a second round of the competition was undertaken, in 2019, again with freely-donated models that other participants could see. The best-performing models from this second round were used to predict novel inhibitory molecules, of which several were synthesised and evaluated against the parasite. One such compound, containing a motif that the human chemists familiar with this series would have dismissed as ill-advised, was active. The project demonstrated the abilities of new machine learning methods in the prediction of active compounds where there is no biological target structure, frequently the central problem in phenotypic drug discovery. Since all data and participant interactions remain in the public domain, this research project “lives” and may be improved by others.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Shahzamanian ◽  
T. Tadepalli ◽  
A. M. Rajendran ◽  
W. D. Hodo ◽  
R. Mohan ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document