Abstract

BackgroundTo improve the utility of PubChem, a public repository containing biological activities of small molecules, the PubChem3D project adds computationally-derived three-dimensional (3-D) descriptions to the small-molecule records contained in the PubChem Compound database and provides various search and analysis tools that exploit 3-D molecular similarity. Therefore, the efficient use of PubChem3D resources requires an understanding of the statistical and biological meaning of computed 3-D molecular similarity scores between molecules.ResultsThe present study investigated effects of employing multiple conformers per compound upon the 3-D similarity scores between ten thousand randomly selected biologically-tested compounds (10-K set) and between non-inactive compounds in a given biological assay (156-K set). When the “best-conformer-pair” approach, in which a 3-D similarity score between two compounds is represented by the greatest similarity score among all possible conformer pairs arising from a compound pair, was employed with ten diverse conformers per compound, the average 3-D similarity scores for the 10-K set increased by 0.11, 0.09, 0.15, 0.16, 0.07, and 0.18 for STST-opt, CTST-opt, ComboTST-opt, STCT-opt, CTCT-opt, and ComboTCT-opt, respectively, relative to the corresponding averages computed using a single conformer per compound. Interestingly, the best-conformer-pair approach also increased the average 3-D similarity scores for the non-inactive–non-inactive (NN) pairs for a given assay, by comparable amounts to those for the random compound pairs, although some assays showed a pronounced increase in the per-assay NN-pair 3-D similarity scores, compared to the average increase for the random compound pairs.ConclusionThese results suggest that the use of ten diverse conformers per compound in PubChem bioassay data analysis using 3-D molecular similarity is not expected to increase the separation of non-inactive from random and inactive spaces “on average”, although some assays show a noticeable separation between the non-inactive and random spaces when multiple conformers are used for each compound. The present study is a critical next step to understand effects of conformational diversity of the molecules upon the 3-D molecular similarity and its application to biological activity data analysis in PubChem. The results of this study may be helpful to build search and analysis tools that exploit 3-D molecular similarity between compounds archived in PubChem and other molecular libraries in a more efficient way.

Highlights

  • To improve the utility of PubChem, a public repository containing biological activities of small molecules, the PubChem3D project adds computationally-derived three-dimensional (3-D) descriptions to the small-molecule records contained in the PubChem Compound database and provides various search and analysis tools that exploit 3-D molecular similarity

  • In the first part of this study, the 3-D similarity score distribution curves were generated for the unique conformer-conformer, conformer-compound, and compound-compound pairs, using a single conformer and ten diverse conformers for each of 10,000 randomly selected compounds (Figures 1, 2, 3, 4 and Table 3)

  • When each conformer was treated like a unique compound, the all-against-all conformer comparison using ten diverse conformers per compound resulted in similarity score distributions nearly identical to those computed with a single conformer per compound

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Summary

Introduction

To improve the utility of PubChem, a public repository containing biological activities of small molecules, the PubChem3D project adds computationally-derived three-dimensional (3-D) descriptions to the small-molecule records contained in the PubChem Compound database and provides various search and analysis tools that exploit 3-D molecular similarity. The PubChem3D project [5,6,7,8,9,10,11] augments the utility of PubChem, by adding computed three-dimensional (3-D) descriptions to about 90% of the small molecules contained in the PubChem Compound database [6,11] Each of these may include multiple 3-D conformations that are sampled to remove redundancy, guaranteeing a minimum (non-hydrogen atom pair-wise) root-mean-square distance (RMSD) between conformers. Systematic augmentation of PubChem resources to include a computed 3-D similarity layer grants users new capabilities to search, subset, visualize, analyze, and download data [11]

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