Brain-inspired cheminformatics of drug-target brain interactome, synthesis, and assay of TVP1022 derivatives.

Journal: Neuropharmacology
PMID:

Abstract

The use of Cheminformatics tools is gaining importance in the field of translational research from Medicinal Chemistry to Neuropharmacology. In particular, we need it for the analysis of chemical information on large datasets of bioactive compounds. These compounds form large multi-target complex networks (drug-target interactome network) resulting in a very challenging data analysis problem. Artificial Neural Network (ANN) algorithms may help us predict the interactions of drugs and targets in CNS interactome. In this work, we trained different ANN models able to predict a large number of drug-target interactions. These models predict a dataset of thousands of interactions of central nervous system (CNS) drugs characterized by > 30 different experimental measures in >400 different experimental protocols for >150 molecular and cellular targets present in 11 different organisms (including human). The model was able to classify cases of non-interacting vs. interacting drug-target pairs with satisfactory performance. A second aim focus on two main directions: the synthesis and assay of new derivatives of TVP1022 (S-analogues of rasagiline) and the comparison with other rasagiline derivatives recently reported. Finally, we used the best of our models to predict drug-target interactions for the best new synthesized compound against a large number of CNS protein targets.

Authors

  • Francisco J Romero-Durán
    Department of Organic Chemistry, USC, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain; IMQ Zorrotzaurre Clinic, 48014 Bilbao, Spain.
  • Nerea Alonso
    Department of Organic Chemistry, USC, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
  • Matilde Yañez
    Department of Pharmacology, USC, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
  • Olga Caamaño
    Department of Organic Chemistry, USC, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
  • Xerardo García-Mera
    Department of Organic Chemistry, USC, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Electronic address: xerardo.garcia@usc.es.
  • Humberto Gonzalez-Diaz