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"Big Data" Fast Chemoinformatics Model to Predict Generalized Born Radius and Solvent Accessibility as a Function of Geometry.

Dragos HorvathGilles MarcouAlexander Varnek
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2020)
The Generalized Born (GB) solvent model is offering the best accuracy/computing effort ratio yet requires drastic simplifications to estimate of the Effective Born Radii (EBR) in bypassing a too expensive volume integration step. EBRs are a measure of the degree of burial of an atom and not very sensitive to small changes of geometry: in molecular dynamics, the costly EBR update procedure is not mandatory at every step. This work however aims at implementing a GB model into the Sampler for Multiple Protein-Ligand Entities (S4MPLE) evolutionary algorithm with mandatory EBR updates at each step triggering arbitrarily large geometric changes. Therefore, a quantitative structure-property relationship has been developed in order to express the EBRs as a linear function of both the topological neighborhood and geometric occupancy of the space around atoms. A training set of 810 molecular systems, starting from fragment-like to drug-like compounds, proteins, host-guest systems, and ligand-protein complexes, has been compiled. For each species, S4MPLE generated several hundreds of random conformers. For each atom in each geometry of each species, its "standard" EBR was calculated by numeric integration and associated to topological and geometric descriptors of the atom neighborhood. This training set (EBR, atom descriptors) involving >5 M entries was subjected to a boot-strapping multilinear regression process with descriptor selection. In parallel, the strategy was repurposed to also learn atomic solvent-accessible areas (SA) based on the same descriptors. Resulting linear equations were challenged to predict EBR and SA values for a similarly compiled external set of >2000 new molecular systems. Solvation energies calculated with estimated EBR and SA match "standard" energies within the typical error of a force-field-based approach (a few kilocalories per mole). Given the extreme diversity of molecular systems covered by the model, this simple EBR/SA estimator covers a vast applicability domain.
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