Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Enumeration of 166 Billion Organic Small Molecules in the Chemical Universe Database GDB-17

2012; American Chemical Society; Volume: 52; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ci300415d

ISSN

1549-960X

Autores

Lars Ruddigkeit, Ruud van Deursen, Lorenz C. Blum, Jean‐Louis Reymond,

Tópico(s)

Chemical Synthesis and Analysis

Resumo

Drug molecules consist of a few tens of atoms connected by covalent bonds. How many such molecules are possible in total and what is their structure? This question is of pressing interest in medicinal chemistry to help solve the problems of drug potency, selectivity, and toxicity and reduce attrition rates by pointing to new molecular series. To better define the unknown chemical space, we have enumerated 166.4 billion molecules of up to 17 atoms of C, N, O, S, and halogens forming the chemical universe database GDB-17, covering a size range containing many drugs and typical for lead compounds. GDB-17 contains millions of isomers of known drugs, including analogs with high shape similarity to the parent drug. Compared to known molecules in PubChem, GDB-17 molecules are much richer in nonaromatic heterocycles, quaternary centers, and stereoisomers, densely populate the third dimension in shape space, and represent many more scaffold types.

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