Abstract

In order to better understand the common features present in drug molecules, we use shape description methods to analyze a database of commercially available drugs and prepare a list of common drug shapes. A useful way of organizing this structural data is to group the atoms of each drug molecule into ring, linker, framework, and side chain atoms. On the basis of the two-dimensional molecular structures (without regard to atom type, hybridization, and bond order), there are 1179 different frameworks among the 5120 compounds analyzed. However, the shapes of half of the drugs in the database are described by the 32 most frequently occurring frameworks. This suggests that the diversity of shapes in the set of known drugs is extremely low. In our second method of analysis, in which atom type, hybridization, and bond order are considered, more diversity is seen; there are 2506 different frameworks among the 5120 compounds in the database, and the most frequently occurring 42 frameworks account for only one-fourth of the drugs. We discuss the possible interpretations of these findings and the way they may be used to guide future drug discovery research.

Keywords

ChemistryDrug discoverySet (abstract data type)Atom (system on chip)LinkerMoleculeComputational biologyRing (chemistry)Combinatorial chemistryComputer scienceBiologyOrganic chemistryBiochemistry

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Publication Info

Year
1996
Type
article
Volume
39
Issue
15
Pages
2887-2893
Citations
2279
Access
Closed

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Guy W. Bemis, Mark A. Murcko (1996). The Properties of Known Drugs. 1. Molecular Frameworks. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry , 39 (15) , 2887-2893. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm9602928

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/jm9602928