4.7 Article

Unify QSAR approach to antimicrobials.: Part I:: Predicting antifungal activity against different species

Journal

BIOORGANIC & MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages 5973-5980

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2006.05.018

Keywords

QSAR; Markov model; antifungal drugs; linear discriminant analysis; antimicrobials

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Most of up-to-date reported molecular descriptors encode only information about the molecular structure. In previous papers, we have extended stochastic descriptors to encode additional information such as target site, partition system, or biological species [Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 2005,15, 551; Bioorg. Med Chem. 2005,13, 1119]. This work develops an unify Markov model to describe with a single linear equation the biological activity of 74 drugs tested in the literature against some of the fungi species selected from a list of 87 species (491 cases in total). The data were processed by linear discriminant analysis (LDA) classifying drugs as active or non-active against the different tested fungi species. The model correctly classifies 338 out of 368 active compounds (91.85%) and 89 out of 123 non-active compounds (72.36%). Overall training predictability was 86.97% (427 out of 491 compounds). Validation of the model was carried out by means of leave-species-out (LSO) procedure. After elimination step-by-step of all drugs tested against one specific species, we record the percentage of good classification of leave-out compounds (LSO-predictability). In addition, robustness of the model to the elimination of the compounds (LSO-robustness) was considered. This aspect was considered as the variation of the percentage of good classification of the modified model (Delta) in LSO with respect to the original one. Average LSO-predictability was 86.41 +/- 0.95% (average +/- SD) and Delta = -0.55%, being 6 the average number of drugs tested against each fungi species. Results for some of the 87 studied species were Candida albicans: 43 tested compounds, 100% of LSO-predictability, Delta = -3.49%; Candidaparapsilosis 23, 100%, Delta = -0.86%; Aspergillus fumigatus 21, 95.20%, Delta = 0.05%; Microsportan canis 12, 91.60%, Delta = -2.84%; Trichophyton mentagrophytes 11, 100%, Delta = -0.51%; Cryptococcus neoformans 10, 90%, Delta = -0.90%. The present one is the first reported unify model that allows one predicting antifungal activity of any organic compound against a very large diversity of fungi pathogens. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available