Counterexamples in Chemical Ring Perception

Franziska Berger, Christoph Flamm, Petra M. Gleiss, Josef Leydold, and Peter F. Stadler*#§
Zentrum Mathematik, TU Mnchen, Boltzmannstrasse 3, D-85747 Germany, Institut fr Theoretische Chemie und Molekulare Strukturbiologie, Universitt Wien, Whringerstrasse 17, A-1090 Wien, Austria, Department for Applied Statistics and Data Processing, University of Economics and Business Administration, Augasse 2-6, A-1090 Wien, Austria, Bioinformatik, Institut fr Informatik, Universitt Leipzig, Kreuzstrasse 7b, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany, and The Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 2004, 44 (2), pp 323–331
DOI: 10.1021/ci030405d
Publication Date (Web): March 5, 2004
Copyright © 2004 American Chemical Society

 Dedicated to George W. A. Milne, a former long-term Editor-in-Chief of JCICS.

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 TU München.

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 Universität Wien.

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 University of Economics and Business Administration Wien.

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*

 Corresponding author e-mail:  peter.stadler@bioinf.uni-leipzig.de.

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 Universität Leipzig.

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 The Santa Fe Institute.

Abstract

Ring information is a large part of the structural topology used to identify and characterize molecular structures. It is hence of crucial importance to obtain this information for a variety of tasks in computational chemistry. Many different approaches for “ring perception”, i.e., the extraction of cycles from a molecular graph, have been described. The chemistry literature on this topic, however, reports a surprisingly large number of incorrect statements about the properties of chemically relevant ring sets and, in particular, about the mutual relationships of different sets of cycles in a graph. In part these problems seem to have arisen from a sometimes rather idiosyncratic terminology for notions that are fairly standard in graph theory. In this contribution we translate the definitions of concepts such as the Smallest Set of Smallest Rings, Essential Set of Essential Rings, Extended Set of Smallest Rings, Set of Smallest Cycles at Edges, Set of Elementary Rings, K-rings, and β-rings into a more widely used mathematical language. We then outline the basic properties of different cycle sets and provide numerous counterexamples to incorrect claims in the published literature. These counterexamples may have a serious practical impact because at least some of them are molecular graphs of well-known molecules. As a consequence, we propose a catalog of desirable properties for chemically useful sets of rings.

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History

  • Published In Issue March 22, 2004
  • Received June 11, 2003

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