Chemical Descriptors with Distinct Levels of Information Content and Varying Sensitivity to Differences between Selected Compound Databases Identified by SE-DSE Analysis

Jeffrey W. Godden and Jürgen Bajorath*#
Albany Molecular Research, Inc., Bothell Research Center (AMRI-BRC), 18804 North Creek Parkway, Bothell, Washington 98011, and AMRI-BRC and Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 2002, 42 (1), pp 87–93
DOI: 10.1021/ci0103065
Publication Date (Web): November 28, 2001
Copyright © 2002 American Chemical Society

 Albany Molecular Research, Inc., Bothell Research Center (AMRI-BRC).

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 Corresponding author phone:  (425)424-7297; fax:  (425)424-7299; e-mail:  jurgen.bajorath@albmolecular.com.

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 University of Washington.

Abstract

Analysis of the variability of molecular descriptors in large compound databases has recently been carried out using both the Shannon entropy (SE) and differential Shannon entropy (DSE) concepts that reduce descriptor distributions to their information content (SE analysis) and detect intrinsic differences between descriptor settings in compound databases (DSE analysis). Here it is shown that a combination of SE and DSE calculations, termed SE-DSE analysis, makes it possible to identify molecular descriptors most sensitive to systematic differences in databases consisting of synthetic, drug-like, and natural molecules. Descriptors with consistently high information content are detected, and database-specific differences are quantified. Different sets of only very few descriptors were found to be most responsive to principal differences between synthetic, natural, and drug-like molecules. Descriptors with DSE values furthest away from zero are likely to best distinguish between compounds with different characteristics. SE-DSE analysis also reveals that a number of descriptors are not sensitive to compound class-specific features, despite their complexity and consistently high information content.

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History

  • Published In Issue January 28, 2002
  • Received July 4, 2001

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