Login / Signup

BioPrint meets the AI age: development of artificial intelligence-based ADMET models for the drug discovery platform SAFIRE.

Sarah E BiehnLuis Miguel GoncalvesJuerg LehmannJessica D MartyChristoph MuellerSamuel A RamirezFabien TillierCarleton R Sage
Published in: Future medicinal chemistry (2024)
Background: To prioritize compounds with a higher likelihood of success, artificial intelligence models can be used to predict absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion and toxicity (ADMET) properties of molecules quickly and efficiently. Methods: Models were trained with BioPrint database proprietary data along with public datasets to predict various ADMET end points for the SAFIRE platform. Results: SAFIRE models performed at or above 75% accuracy and 0.4 Matthew's correlation coefficient with validation sets. Training with both proprietary and public data improved model performance and expanded the chemical space on which the models were trained. The platform features scoring functionality to guide user decision-making. Conclusion: High-quality datasets along with chemical space considerations yielded ADMET models performing favorably with utility in the drug discovery process.
Keyphrases