articleJournal of Medicinal ChemistryAug 13, 2002Closed access

Do Structurally Similar Molecules Have Similar Biological Activity?

Abbott Fund

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

To design diverse combinatorial libraries or to select diverse compounds to augment a screening collection, computational chemists frequently reject compounds that are > or =0.85 similar to one already chosen for the combinatorial library or in the screening set. Using Daylight fingerprints, this report shows that for IC(50) values determined as a follow-up to 115 high-throughput screening assays, there is only a 30% chance that a compound that is > or = 0.85 (Tanimoto) similar to an active is itself active. Although this enrichment is greater than that found with random screening and docking to three-dimensional structures, this low fraction of actives within similar compounds occurs not only because of…

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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Chemistry
  • Probabilistic logic
  • Computational biology
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Similarity (geometry)
  • High-throughput screening
  • Combinatorial chemistry
  • Combinatorial synthesis
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