Nathaniel J Brittin, Josephine M Anderson, Doug R Braun, Scott R Rajski, Cameron R Currie, Tim S Bugni
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The rediscovery of known drug classes represents a major challenge in natural products drug discovery. Compound rediscovery inhibits the ability of researchers to explore novel natural products and wastes significant amounts of time and resources. This study introduces a novel machine learning framework that can effectively characterize the bioactivity of natural products by leveraging liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and untargeted metabolomics analysis. This accelerates natural product drug discovery by addressing the challenge of dereplicating previously discovered bioactive compounds. Utilizing the SIRIUS 5 metabolomics software suite and in-silico-generated fragmentation spectra, we have trained a ML model capable of predicting a compound's drug class. This approach enables the rapid identification of bioactive scaffolds from LC-MS/MS data, even without reference experimental spectra. The model was trained on a diverse set of molecular fingerprints generated by SIRIUS 5 to effectively classify compounds based on their core pharmacophores. Our model robustly classified 21 diverse bioactive drug classes, achieving accuracies greater than 93% on experimental spectra. This study underscores the potential of ML combined with MFPs to dereplicate bioactive natural products based on pharmacophore, streamlining the discovery process and expediting improved methods of isolating novel antibacterial and antifungal agents.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Natural Products invites and publishes papers that make substantial and scholarly contributions to the area of natural products research. Contributions may relate to the chemistry and/or biochemistry of naturally occurring compounds or the biology of living systems from which they are obtained.
Specifically, there may be articles that describe secondary metabolites of microorganisms, including antibiotics and mycotoxins; physiologically active compounds from terrestrial and marine plants and animals; biochemical studies, including biosynthesis and microbiological transformations; fermentation and plant tissue culture; the isolation, structure elucidation, and chemical synthesis of novel compounds from nature; and the pharmacology of compounds of natural origin.
When new compounds are reported, manuscripts describing their biological activity are much preferred.
Specifically, there may be articles that describe secondary metabolites of microorganisms, including antibiotics and mycotoxins; physiologically active compounds from terrestrial and marine plants and animals; biochemical studies, including biosynthesis and microbiological transformations; fermentation and plant tissue culture; the isolation, structure elucidation, and chemical synthesis of novel compounds from nature; and the pharmacology of compounds of natural origin.