Authors
Andrew Rusinko III, Mark W Farmen, Christophe G Lambert, Paul L Brown, S Stanley Young
Publication date
1999
Journal
J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci
Volume
39
Pages
1017-1026
Description
Combinatorial chemistry and high-throughput screening are revolutionizing the process of lead discovery in the pharmaceutical industry. Large numbers of structures and vast quantities of biological assay data are quickly being accumulated, overwhelming traditional structure/activity relationship (SAR) analysis technologies. Recursive partitioning is a method for statistically determining rules that classify objects into similar categories or, in this case, structures into groups of molecules with similar potencies. SCAM is a computer program implemented to make extremely efficient use of this methodology. Depending on the size of the data set, rules explaining biological data can be determined interactively. An example data set of 1650 monoamine oxidase inhibitors exemplifies the method, yielding substructural rules and leading to general classifications of these inhibitors. The method scales linearly with the number …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Rusinko, MW Farmen, CG Lambert, PL Brown… - Journal of chemical information and computer sciences, 1999