PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2012)

DOGS: reaction-driven de novo design of bioactive compounds.

  • Markus Hartenfeller,
  • Heiko Zettl,
  • Miriam Walter,
  • Matthias Rupp,
  • Felix Reisen,
  • Ewgenij Proschak,
  • Sascha Weggen,
  • Holger Stark,
  • Gisbert Schneider

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002380
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. e1002380

Abstract

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We present a computational method for the reaction-based de novo design of drug-like molecules. The software DOGS (Design of Genuine Structures) features a ligand-based strategy for automated 'in silico' assembly of potentially novel bioactive compounds. The quality of the designed compounds is assessed by a graph kernel method measuring their similarity to known bioactive reference ligands in terms of structural and pharmacophoric features. We implemented a deterministic compound construction procedure that explicitly considers compound synthesizability, based on a compilation of 25'144 readily available synthetic building blocks and 58 established reaction principles. This enables the software to suggest a synthesis route for each designed compound. Two prospective case studies are presented together with details on the algorithm and its implementation. De novo designed ligand candidates for the human histamine H₄ receptor and γ-secretase were synthesized as suggested by the software. The computational approach proved to be suitable for scaffold-hopping from known ligands to novel chemotypes, and for generating bioactive molecules with drug-like properties.