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Capturing Nature's Diversity

Natural products are universally recognized to contribute valuable chemical diversity to the design of molecular screening libraries. The analysis undertaken in this work, provides a foundation for the generation of fragment screening libraries that capture the diverse range of molecular recognition...

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Autores principales: Pascolutti, Mauro, Campitelli, Marc, Nguyen, Bao, Pham, Ngoc, Gorse, Alain-Dominique, Quinn, Ronald J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4406718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25902039
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120942
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author Pascolutti, Mauro
Campitelli, Marc
Nguyen, Bao
Pham, Ngoc
Gorse, Alain-Dominique
Quinn, Ronald J.
author_facet Pascolutti, Mauro
Campitelli, Marc
Nguyen, Bao
Pham, Ngoc
Gorse, Alain-Dominique
Quinn, Ronald J.
author_sort Pascolutti, Mauro
collection PubMed
description Natural products are universally recognized to contribute valuable chemical diversity to the design of molecular screening libraries. The analysis undertaken in this work, provides a foundation for the generation of fragment screening libraries that capture the diverse range of molecular recognition building blocks embedded within natural products. Physicochemical properties were used to select fragment-sized natural products from a database of known natural products (Dictionary of Natural Products). PCA analysis was used to illustrate the positioning of the fragment subset within the property space of the non-fragment sized natural products in the dataset. Structural diversity was analysed by three distinct methods: atom function analysis, using pharmacophore fingerprints, atom type analysis, using radial fingerprints, and scaffold analysis. Small pharmacophore triplets, representing the range of chemical features present in natural products that are capable of engaging in molecular interactions with small, contiguous areas of protein binding surfaces, were analysed. We demonstrate that fragment-sized natural products capture more than half of the small pharmacophore triplet diversity observed in non fragment-sized natural product datasets. Atom type analysis using radial fingerprints was represented by a self-organizing map. We examined the structural diversity of non-flat fragment-sized natural product scaffolds, rich in sp3 configured centres. From these results we demonstrate that 2-ring fragment-sized natural products effectively balance the opposing characteristics of minimal complexity and broad structural diversity when compared to the larger, more complex fragment-like natural products. These naturally-derived fragments could be used as the starting point for the generation of a highly diverse library with the scope for further medicinal chemistry elaboration due to their minimal structural complexity. This study highlights the possibility to capture a high proportion of the individual molecular interaction motifs embedded within natural products using a fragment screening library spanning 422 structural clusters and comprised of approximately 2800 natural products.
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spelling pubmed-44067182015-05-07 Capturing Nature's Diversity Pascolutti, Mauro Campitelli, Marc Nguyen, Bao Pham, Ngoc Gorse, Alain-Dominique Quinn, Ronald J. PLoS One Research Article Natural products are universally recognized to contribute valuable chemical diversity to the design of molecular screening libraries. The analysis undertaken in this work, provides a foundation for the generation of fragment screening libraries that capture the diverse range of molecular recognition building blocks embedded within natural products. Physicochemical properties were used to select fragment-sized natural products from a database of known natural products (Dictionary of Natural Products). PCA analysis was used to illustrate the positioning of the fragment subset within the property space of the non-fragment sized natural products in the dataset. Structural diversity was analysed by three distinct methods: atom function analysis, using pharmacophore fingerprints, atom type analysis, using radial fingerprints, and scaffold analysis. Small pharmacophore triplets, representing the range of chemical features present in natural products that are capable of engaging in molecular interactions with small, contiguous areas of protein binding surfaces, were analysed. We demonstrate that fragment-sized natural products capture more than half of the small pharmacophore triplet diversity observed in non fragment-sized natural product datasets. Atom type analysis using radial fingerprints was represented by a self-organizing map. We examined the structural diversity of non-flat fragment-sized natural product scaffolds, rich in sp3 configured centres. From these results we demonstrate that 2-ring fragment-sized natural products effectively balance the opposing characteristics of minimal complexity and broad structural diversity when compared to the larger, more complex fragment-like natural products. These naturally-derived fragments could be used as the starting point for the generation of a highly diverse library with the scope for further medicinal chemistry elaboration due to their minimal structural complexity. This study highlights the possibility to capture a high proportion of the individual molecular interaction motifs embedded within natural products using a fragment screening library spanning 422 structural clusters and comprised of approximately 2800 natural products. Public Library of Science 2015-04-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4406718/ /pubmed/25902039 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120942 Text en © 2015 Pascolutti et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pascolutti, Mauro
Campitelli, Marc
Nguyen, Bao
Pham, Ngoc
Gorse, Alain-Dominique
Quinn, Ronald J.
Capturing Nature's Diversity
title Capturing Nature's Diversity
title_full Capturing Nature's Diversity
title_fullStr Capturing Nature's Diversity
title_full_unstemmed Capturing Nature's Diversity
title_short Capturing Nature's Diversity
title_sort capturing nature's diversity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4406718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25902039
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120942
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