Abstract

The use of Bayesian statistics to model both general (multifamily) and specific (single-target) kinase inhibitors is investigated. The approach demonstrates an alternative to current computational methods applied to heterogeneous structure/activity data sets. This approach operates rapidly and is readily modifiable as required. A generalized model generated using inhibitor data from multiple kinase classes shows meaningful enrichment for several specific kinase targets. Such an approach can be used to prioritize compounds for screening or to optimally select compounds from third-party data collections. The observed benefit of the approach is finding compounds that are not structurally related to known actives, or novel targets for which there is not enough information to build a specific kinase model. The general kinase model described was built from a basis of mostly tyrosine kinase inhibitors, with some serine/threonine inhibitors; all the test cases used in prediction were also on tyrosine kinase targets. Confirming the applicability of this technique to other kinase families will be determined once those biological assays become available.

Keywords

Tyrosine kinaseComputational biologyKinaseChemistryBayesian probabilityComputer scienceBiochemistryArtificial intelligenceBiologySignal transduction

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Publication Info

Year
2004
Type
article
Volume
47
Issue
18
Pages
4463-4470
Citations
354
Access
Closed

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Xiaoyang Xia, Edward Maliski, Paul Gallant et al. (2004). Classification of Kinase Inhibitors Using a Bayesian Model. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry , 47 (18) , 4463-4470. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm0303195

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/jm0303195