Abstract

The drug discovery of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) superfamily using computational models is often limited by the availability of protein three-dimensional (3D) structures and chemicals with experimentally measured bioactivities. Orphan GPCRs without known ligands further complicate the process. To enable drug discovery for human orphan GPCRs, multitask models were proposed for predicting half maximal effective concentrations (EC50) of the pairs of chemicals and GPCRs. Protein multiple sequence alignment features, and physicochemical properties and fingerprints of chemicals were utilized to encode the protein and chemical information, respectively. The protein features enabled the transfer of data-rich GPCRs to orphan receptors and the transferability based on the similarity of protein features. The final model was trained using both agonist and antagonist data from 200 GPCRs and showed an excellent mean squared error (MSE) of 0.24 in the validation dataset. An independent test using the orphan dataset consisting of 16 receptors associated with less than 8 bioactivities showed a reasonably good MSE of 1.51 that can be further improved to 0.53 by considering the transferability based on protein features. The informative features were identified and mapped to corresponding 3D structures to gain insights into the mechanism of GPCR-ligand interactions across the GPCR family. The proposed method provides a novel perspective on learning ligand bioactivity within the diverse human GPCR superfamily and can potentially accelerate the discovery of therapeutic agents for orphan GPCRs.

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