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ChemBioSim: Enhancing Conformal Prediction of In Vivo Toxicity by Use of Predicted Bioactivities
BASF SE, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany; Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
In Silico Toxicology and Structural Bioinformatics, Institute of Physiology, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Örebro University, School of Science and Technology. (MTM Research Centre, School of Science and Technology)ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3107-331X
BASF SE, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany.
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2021 (English)In: Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, ISSN 1549-9596, E-ISSN 1549-960X, Vol. 61, no 7, p. 3255-3272Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Computational methods such as machine learning approaches have a strong track record of success in predicting the outcomes of in vitro assays. In contrast, their ability to predict in vivo endpoints is more limited due to the high number of parameters and processes that may influence the outcome. Recent studies have shown that the combination of chemical and biological data can yield better models for in vivo endpoints. The ChemBioSim approach presented in this work aims to enhance the performance of conformal prediction models for in vivo endpoints by combining chemical information with (predicted) bioactivity assay outcomes. Three in vivo toxicological endpoints, capturing genotoxic (MNT), hepatic (DILI), and cardiological (DICC) issues, were selected for this study due to their high relevance for the registration and authorization of new compounds. Since the sparsity of available biological assay data is challenging for predictive modeling, predicted bioactivity descriptors were introduced instead. Thus, a machine learning model for each of the 373 collected biological assays was trained and applied on the compounds of the in vivo toxicity data sets. Besides the chemical descriptors (molecular fingerprints and physicochemical properties), these predicted bioactivities served as descriptors for the models of the three in vivo endpoints. For this study, a workflow based on a conformal prediction framework (a method for confidence estimation) built on random forest models was developed. Furthermore, the most relevant chemical and bioactivity descriptors for each in vivo endpoint were preselected with lasso models. The incorporation of bioactivity descriptors increased the mean F1 scores of the MNT model from 0.61 to 0.70 and for the DICC model from 0.72 to 0.82 while the mean efficiencies increased by roughly 0.10 for both endpoints. In contrast, for the DILI endpoint, no significant improvement in model performance was observed. Besides pure performance improvements, an analysis of the most important bioactivity features allowed detection of novel and less intuitive relationships between the predicted biological assay outcomes used as descriptors and the in vivo endpoints. This study presents how the prediction of in vivo toxicity endpoints can be improved by the incorporation of biological information-which is not necessarily captured by chemical descriptors-in an automated workflow without the need for adding experimental workload for the generation of bioactivity descriptors as predicted outcomes of bioactivity assays were utilized. All bioactivity CP models for deriving the predicted bioactivities, as well as the in vivo toxicity CP models, can be freely downloaded from https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761225.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021. Vol. 61, no 7, p. 3255-3272
National Category
Bioinformatics (Computational Biology)
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-92562DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00451ISI: 000678396200008PubMedID: 34153183Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85110263600OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-92562DiVA, id: diva2:1571716
Note

Funding agencies:

Federal Ministry of Education & Research (BMBF) 031A262C  

HaVoStiftung

BASF

Available from: 2021-06-23 Created: 2021-06-23 Last updated: 2024-01-16Bibliographically approved

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Norinder, Ulf

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