Issue 5, 2012

Structural enrichment of HTS compounds from available commercial libraries

Abstract

Compounds from 36 commercial supplier libraries and the NCI open database were analysed to address the bias in structural features for the selection of small molecules for high-throughput screening (HTS). Initially a meta dataset consisting of 11.8 million unique structures was identified from 15.6 million compounds by eliminating redundant molecules from individual libraries. Then the selection of the HTS compounds from these libraries was accomplished using common structural filters, physicochemical filters and recently emerged descriptors. Compound libraries from different suppliers were also analysed according to their exclusiveness, ‘drug-likeness’ and scaffold similarities (using asymmetrical metrics). The results show that large libraries offer the biggest pool of ‘drug-like’ molecules with an optimal trade-off between the diversity of chemotypes and the variety of analogous compounds for biological screening.

Graphical abstract: Structural enrichment of HTS compounds from available commercial libraries

Supplementary files

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Concise Article
Submitted
06 Dec 2011
Accepted
17 Jan 2012
First published
19 Jan 2012

Med. Chem. Commun., 2012,3, 571-579

Structural enrichment of HTS compounds from available commercial libraries

T. Petrova, A. Chuprina, R. Parkesh and A. Pushechnikov, Med. Chem. Commun., 2012, 3, 571 DOI: 10.1039/C2MD00302C

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