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Discovering new antiretroviral compounds in «Big Data» chemical space of the SAVI library
Author(s) -
P I Savosina,
Leonid Stolbov,
Dmitry S. Druzhilovskiy,
Д. А. Филимонов,
Marc C. Nicklaus,
Vladimir Poroikov
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biomedicinskaâ himiâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 2310-6972
pISSN - 2310-6905
DOI - 10.18097/pbmc20196502073
Subject(s) - pubchem , chemical space , virtual screening , computer science , autodock , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , in silico , world wide web , bioinformatics , drug discovery , medicine , biology , computational biology , virology , biochemistry , gene
Despite significant advances in the application of highly active antiretroviral therapy, the development of new drugs for the treatment of HIV infection remains an important task because the existing drugs do not provide a complete cure, cause serious side effects and lead to the emergence of resistance. In 2015, a consortium of American and European scientists and specialists launched a project to create the SAVI (Synthetically Accessible Virtual Inventory) library. Its 2016 version of over 283 million structures of new easily synthesizable organic molecules, each annotated with a proposed synthetic route, were generated in silico for the purpose of searching for safer and more potent pharmacological substances. We have developed an algorithm for comparing large chemical databases (DB) based on the representation of structural formulas in SMILES codes, and evaluated the possibility of detecting new antiretroviral compounds in the SAVI database. After analyzing the intersection of SAVI with 97 million structures of the PubChem database, we found that only a small part of the SAVI (~0.015%) is represented in PubChem, which indicates a significant novelty of this virtual library. However, among those structures, 632 compounds tested for anti-HIV activity were detected, 41 of which had the desired activity. Thus, our studies for the first time demonstrated that SAVI is a promising source for the search for new anti-HIV compounds.

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