Antitumor agents 252. Application of validated QSAR models to database mining: Discovery of novel tylophorine derivatives as potential anticancer agents

Shuxing Zhang, Linyi Wei, Ken Bastow, Weifan Zheng, Arnold Brossi, Kuo Hsiung Lee, Alexander Tropsha

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

86 Scopus citations

Abstract

A combined approach of validated QSAR modeling and virtual screening was successfully applied to the discovery of novel tylophrine derivatives as anticancer agents. QSAR models have been initially developed for 52 chemically diverse phenanthrine-based tylophrine derivatives (PBTs) with known experimental EC50 using chemical topological descriptors (calculated with the MolConnZ program) and variable selection k nearest neighbor (kNN) method. Several validation protocols have been applied to achieve robust QSAR models. The original dataset was divided into multiple training and test sets, and the models were considered acceptable only if the leave-one-out cross-validated R2 (q2) values were greater than 0.5 for the training sets and the correlation coefficient R2 values were greater than 0.6 for the test sets. Furthermore, the q2 values for the actual dataset were shown to be significantly higher than those obtained for the same dataset with randomized target properties (Y-randomization test), indicating that models were statistically significant. Ten best models were then employed to mine a commercially available ChemDiv Database (ca. 500 K compounds) resulting in 34 consensus hits with moderate to high predicted activities. Ten structurally diverse hits were experimentally tested and eight were confirmed active with the highest experimental EC50 of 1.8 ̈M implying an exceptionally high hit rate (80%). The same ten models were further applied to predict EC50 for four new PBTs, and the correlation coefficient (R2) between the experimental and predicted EC50 for these compounds plus eight active consensus hits was shown to be as high as 0.57. Our studies suggest that the approach combining validated QSAR modeling and virtual screening could be successfully used as a general tool for the discovery of novel biologically active compounds.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)97-112
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design
Volume21
Issue number1-3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2007
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Anti-cancer agents
  • Phenanthrine-based tylophrine derivatives (PBTs)
  • QSAR modeling
  • Virtual screening

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Drug Discovery
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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