4.7 Article

cardioToxCSM: A Web Server for Predicting Cardiotoxicity of Small Molecules

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Volume 62, Issue 20, Pages 4827-4836

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.2c00822

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Research Training Program from the University of Queensland
  2. Investigator Grant from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia [GNT1174405]
  3. Victorian Government

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Toxicity is a major concern in drug design, and current computational methods for predicting toxicity have limitations. To address this, we propose a new web-based computational method, cardioToxCSM, which accurately predicts cardiac toxicity outcomes.
The design of novel, safe, and effective drugs to treat human diseases is a challenging venture, with toxicity being one of the main sources of attrition at later stages of development. Failure due to toxicity incurs a significant increase in costs and time to market, with multiple drugs being withdrawn from the market due to their adverse effects. Cardiotoxicity, for instance, was responsible for the failure of drugs such as fenspiride, propoxyphene, and valdecoxib. While significant effort has been dedicated to mitigate this issue by developing computational approaches that aim to identify molecules likely to be toxic, including quantitative structure-act i v i t y relationship models and machine learning methods, current approaches present limited performance and interpretability. To overcome these, we propose a new web-based computational method, cardioToxCSM, which can predict six types of cardiac toxicity outcomes, including arrhythmia, cardiac failure, heart block, hERG toxicity, hypertension, and myocardial infarction, efficiently and accurately. cardioToxCSM was developed using the concept of graph-based signatures, molecular descriptors, toxicophore matchings, and molecular fingerprints, leveraging explainable machine learning, and was validated internally via different cross validation schemes and externally via low-redundancy blind sets. The models presented robust performances with areas under ROC curves of up to 0.898 on 5-fold cross-validation, consistent with metrics on blind tests. Additionally, our models provide interpretation of the predictions by identifying whether substructures that are commonly enriched in toxic compounds were present. We believe cardioToxCSM will provide valuable insight into the potential cardiotoxicity of small molecules early on drug screening efforts. The method is made freely available as a web server at https://biosig.lab.uq.edu.au/ cardiotoxcsm.

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