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Mol Inform ; : e202400154, 2024 Aug 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39105614

RESUMEN

During the early stages of drug design, identifying compounds with suitable bioactivities is crucial. Given the vast array of potential drug databases, it's feasible to assay only a limited subset of candidates. The optimal method for selecting the candidates, aiming to minimize the overall number of assays, involves an active learning (AL) approach. In this work, we benchmarked a range of AL strategies with two main objectives: (1) to identify a strategy that ensures high model performance and (2) to select molecules with desired properties using minimal assays. To evaluate the different AL strategies, we employed the simulated AL workflow based on "virtual" experiments. These experiments leveraged ChEMBL datasets, which come with known biological activity values for the molecules. Furthermore, for classification tasks, we proposed the hybrid selection strategy that unified both exploration and exploitation AL strategies into a single acquisition function, defined by parameters n and c. We have also shown that popular minimal margin and maximal variance selection approaches for exploration selection correspond to minimization of the hybrid acquisition function with n=1 and 2 respectively. The balance between the exploration and exploitation strategies can be adjusted using a coefficient (c), making the optimal strategy selection straightforward. The primary strength of the hybrid selection method lies in its adaptability; it offers the flexibility to adjust the criteria for molecule selection based on the specific task by modifying the value of the contribution coefficient. Our analysis revealed that, in regression tasks, AL strategies didn't succeed at ensuring high model performance, however, they were successful in selecting molecules with desired properties using minimal number of tests. In analogous experiments in classification tasks, exploration strategy and the hybrid selection function with a constant c<1 (for n=1) and c≤0.2 (for n=2) were effective in achieving the goal of constructing a high-performance predictive model using minimal data. When searching for molecules with desired properties, exploitation, and the hybrid function with c≥1 (n=1) and c≥0.7 (n=2) demonstrated efficiency identifying molecules in fewer iterations compared to random selection method. Notably, when the hybrid function was set to an intermediate coefficient value (c=0.7), it successfully addressed both tasks simultaneously.

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