Strategies for drug discovery and repositioning are urgently need with respect to COVID-19. Here we present REDIAL-2020, a suite of computational models for estimating small molecule activities in a range of SARS-CoV-2-related assays. Models were trained using publicly available, high-throughput screening data and by employing different descriptor types and various machine learning strategies. Here we describe the development and use of eleven models that span across the areas of viral entry, viral replication, live virus infectivity, in vitro infectivity and human cell toxicity. REDIAL-2020 is available as a web application through the DrugCentral web portal (http://drugcentral.org/Redial). The web application also provides similarity search results that display the most similar molecules to the query, as well as associated experimental data. REDIAL-2020 can serve as a rapid online tool for identifying active molecules for COVID-19 treatment.
<p> </p><div> <div> <div> <div> <p>Strategies for drug discovery and repositioning are an urgent need with respect to COVID-19. Here we present "REDIAL-2020", a suite of computational models for estimating small molecule activities in a range of SARS-CoV-2 related assays. Models were trained using publicly available, high throughput screening data and by employing different descriptor types and various machine learning strategies. Here we describe the development and the usage of eleven models spanning across the areas of viral entry, viral replication, live virus infectivity, in vitro infectivity and human cell toxicity. REDIAL-2020 is available as a web application through the DrugCentral web portal (http://drugcentral.org/Redial). In addition, the web-app provides similarity search results that display the most similar molecules to the query, as well as associated experimental data. REDIAL-2020 can serve as a rapid online tool for identifying active molecules for COVID-19 treatment. </p> </div> </div> </div> </div><br><p></p>
<p>Strategies for drug discovery and repositioning are an urgent need with respect to COVID-19. We developed "REDIAL-2020", a suite of machine learning models for estimating small molecule activity from molecular structure, for a range of SARS-CoV-2 related assays. Each classifier is based on three distinct types of descriptors (fingerprint, physicochemical, and pharmacophore) for parallel model development. These models were trained using high throughput screening data from the NCATS COVID19 portal (https://opendata.ncats.nih.gov/covid19/index.html), with multiple categorical machine learning algorithms. The “best models” are combined in an ensemble consensus predictor that outperforms single models where external validation is available. This suite of machine learning models is available through the DrugCentral web portal (<a href="https://drugdiscovery.utep.edu/redial">http://drugcentral.org/Redial</a>). Acceptable input formats are: drug name, PubChem CID, or SMILES; the output is an estimate of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activities. The web application reports estimated activity across three areas (<i>viral entry</i>, <i>viral replication,</i> and <i>live virus infectivity</i>) spanning six independent models, followed by a similarity search that displays the most similar molecules to the query among experimentally determined data. The ML models have 60% to 74% external predictivity, based on three separate datasets. Complementing the NCATS COVID19 portal, REDIAL-2020 can serve as a rapid online tool for identifying active molecules for COVID-19 treatment. The source code and specific models are available through Github (<a href="https://github.com/sirimullalab/ncats_covid">https://github.com/sirimullalab/</a>redial-2020), or via Docker Hub (https://hub.docker.com/r/sirimullalab/redial-2020) for users preferring a containerized version.</p>
Strategies for drug discovery and repositioning are an urgent need with respect to COVID-19. We developed "REDIAL-2020", a suite of machine learning models for estimating small molecule activity from molecular structure, for a range of SARS-CoV-2 related assays. Each classifier is based on three distinct types of descriptors (fingerprint, physicochemical, and pharmacophore) for parallel model development. These models were trained using high throughput screening data from the NCATS COVID19 portal (https://opendata.ncats.nih.gov/covid19/index.html), with multiple categorical machine learning algorithms. The “best models” are combined in an ensemble consensus predictor that outperforms single models where external validation is available. This suite of machine learning models is available through the DrugCentral web portal (http://drugcentral.org/Redial). Acceptable input formats are: drug name, PubChem CID, or SMILES; the output is an estimate of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activities. The web application reports estimated activity across three areas (viral entry, viral replication, and live virus infectivity) spanning six independent models, followed by a similarity search that displays the most similar molecules to the query among experimentally determined data. The ML models have 60% to 74% external predictivity, based on three separate datasets. Complementing the NCATS COVID19 portal, REDIAL-2020 can serve as a rapid online tool for identifying active molecules for COVID-19 treatment. The source code and specific models are available through Github (https://github.com/sirimullalab/redial-2020), or via Docker Hub (https://hub.docker.com/r/sirimullalab/redial-2020) for users preferring a containerized version.
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