Abstract

The high attrition rate in drug discovery pipelines is an especially pressing issue for Parkinson's disease, for which no disease-modifying drugs have yet been approved. Numerous clinical trials targeting α-synuclein aggregation have failed, at least in part due to the challenges in identifying potent compounds in preclinical investigations. To address this problem, we present a machine learning approach that combines generative modeling and reinforcement learning to identify small molecules that perturb the kinetics of aggregation in a manner that reduces the production of oligomeric species. Training data were obtained by an assay reporting on the degree of inhibition of secondary nucleation, which is the most important mechanism of α-synuclein oligomer production. This approach resulted in the identification of small molecules with high potency against secondary nucleation.

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