Abstract

Prediction of the degree of drug-like character in small molecules is of great industrial interest. The major barrier, however, is the lack of a definition for drug-like character. We used the concept of the multilevel chemical compatibility (MLCC) between a compound and a drug library as a measure of the drug-like character of a compound. The rationale is that the local chemical environment of each atom or group of atoms in a compound largely contributes to the stability, toxicity, and metabolism in vivo. A systematic comparison of the local environments within a compound and those within the existing drugs provides a basis for determining whether and how much a compound is drug-like. We applied the MLCC calculations to four test sets: top selling drugs, compounds under biological testing prior to the preclinical test, anticancer drugs, and compounds known to have poor drug-like character. The following conclusions were obtained: (1) A convergent number of unique local structure types were found in the analysis of the library of the existing drugs. It suggests that the current drug library contains about 80% of all the viable types; therefore, discovery of a drug with new local structures is only an event of relatively small probability. (2) The method is highly selective in discerning drug-like compounds: most of the top drugs are predicted to be drug-like, about one-quarter of the biological testing compounds are drug-like, and about one-fifth of the anticancer drugs are drug-like. (3) The method also correctly predicted that none of the known problematic compounds are drug-like. (4) The method is fast enough for computational screening of virtual combinatorial chemistry libraries and databases of available compounds.

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