Abstract

Nitroaromatic compounds (NACs) stand out as pervasive organic pollutants, prompting an imperative need to investigate their hazardous effects. Computational chemistry methods play a crucial role in this exploration, offering a safer and more time-efficient approach, mandated by various legislations. In this study, our focus lay on the development of transparent, interpretable, reproducible, and publicly available methodologies aimed at deriving quantitative structure-activity relationship models and testing them by modelling the mutagenicity of NACs against the Salmonella typhimurium TA100 strain. Descriptors were selected from Mordred and RDKit molecular descriptors, along with several quantum chemistry descriptors. For that purpose, the genetic algorithm (GA), as the most widely used method in the literature, and three alternative algorithms (Boruta, Featurewiz, and ForwardSelector) combined with the forward stepwise selection technique were used. The construction of models utilized the multiple linear regression method, with subsequent scrutiny of fitting and predictive performance, reliability, and robustness through various statistical validation criteria. The models were ranked by the Multi-Criteria Decision Making procedure. Findings have revealed that the proposed methodology for descriptor selection outperforms GA, with Featurewiz showing a slight advantage over Boruta and ForwardSelector. These constructed models can serve as valuable tools for the quick and reliable prediction of NACs mutagenicity.

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