Ligand-Based Virtual Screening Using Graph Edit Distance as Molecular Similarity Measure
Author(s) -
Carlos Felipe García-Hernández,
Alberto Fernández,
Francesc Serratosa
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of chemical information and modeling
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1549-960X
pISSN - 1549-9596
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jcim.8b00820
Subject(s) - virtual screening , pharmacophore , computer science , similarity (geometry) , graph , edit distance , molecular graph , data mining , theoretical computer science , algorithm , artificial intelligence , bioinformatics , biology , image (mathematics)
Extended reduced graphs provide summary representations of chemical structures using pharmacophore-type node descriptions to encode the relevant molecular properties. Commonly used similarity measures using reduced graphs convert these graphs into 2D vectors like fingerprints, before chemical comparisons are made. This study investigates the effectiveness of a graph-only driven molecular comparison by using extended reduced graphs along with graph edit distance methods for molecular similarity calculation as a tool for ligand-based virtual screening applications, which estimate the bioactivity of a chemical on the basis of the bioactivity of similar compounds. The results proved to be very stable and the graph editing distance method performed better than other methods previously used on reduced graphs. This is exemplified with six publicly available data sets: DUD-E, MUV, GLL&GDD, CAPST, NRLiSt BDB, and ULS-UDS. The screening and statistical tools available on the ligand-based virtual screening benchmarking platform and the RDKit were also used. In the experiments, our method performed better than other molecular similarity methods which use array representations in most cases. Overall, it is shown that extended reduced graphs along with graph edit distance is a combination of methods that has numerous applications and can identify bioactivity similarities in a structurally diverse group of molecules.
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