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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Kernel Methods in Computer-Aided Constructive Drug Design

Wong, William Wai Lun 04 May 2009 (has links)
A drug is typically a small molecule that interacts with the binding site of some target protein. Drug design involves the optimization of this interaction so that the drug effectively binds with the target protein while not binding with other proteins (an event that could produce dangerous side effects). Computational drug design involves the geometric modeling of drug molecules, with the goal of generating similar molecules that will be more effective drug candidates. It is necessary that algorithms incorporate strategies to measure molecular similarity by comparing molecular descriptors that may involve dozens to hundreds of attributes. We use kernel-based methods to define these measures of similarity. Kernels are general functions that can be used to formulate similarity comparisons. The overall goal of this thesis is to develop effective and efficient computational methods that are reliant on transparent mathematical descriptors of molecules with applications to affinity prediction, detection of multiple binding modes, and generation of new drug leads. While in this thesis we derive computational strategies for the discovery of new drug leads, our approach differs from the traditional ligandbased approach. We have developed novel procedures to calculate inverse mappings and subsequently recover the structure of a potential drug lead. The contributions of this thesis are the following: 1. We propose a vector space model molecular descriptor (VSMMD) based on a vector space model that is suitable for kernel studies in QSAR modeling. Our experiments have provided convincing comparative empirical evidence that our descriptor formulation in conjunction with kernel based regression algorithms can provide sufficient discrimination to predict various biological activities of a molecule with reasonable accuracy. 2. We present a new component selection algorithm KACS (Kernel Alignment Component Selection) based on kernel alignment for a QSAR study. Kernel alignment has been developed as a measure of similarity between two kernel functions. In our algorithm, we refine kernel alignment as an evaluation tool, using recursive component elimination to eventually select the most important components for classification. We have demonstrated empirically and proven theoretically that our algorithm works well for finding the most important components in different QSAR data sets. 3. We extend the VSMMD in conjunction with a kernel based clustering algorithm to the prediction of multiple binding modes, a challenging area of research that has been previously studied by means of time consuming docking simulations. The results reported in this study provide strong empirical evidence that our strategy has enough resolving power to distinguish multiple binding modes through the use of a standard k-means algorithm. 4. We develop a set of reverse engineering strategies for QSAR modeling based on our VSMMD. These strategies include: (a) The use of a kernel feature space algorithm to design or modify descriptor image points in a feature space. (b) The deployment of a pre-image algorithm to map the newly defined descriptor image points in the feature space back to the input space of the descriptors. (c) The design of a probabilistic strategy to convert new descriptors to meaningful chemical graph templates. The most important aspect of these contributions is the presentation of strategies that actually generate the structure of a new drug candidate. While the training set is still used to generate a new image point in the feature space, the reverse engineering strategies just described allows us to develop a new drug candidate that is independent of issues related to probability distribution constraints placed on test set molecules.
2

Kernel Methods in Computer-Aided Constructive Drug Design

Wong, William Wai Lun 04 May 2009 (has links)
A drug is typically a small molecule that interacts with the binding site of some target protein. Drug design involves the optimization of this interaction so that the drug effectively binds with the target protein while not binding with other proteins (an event that could produce dangerous side effects). Computational drug design involves the geometric modeling of drug molecules, with the goal of generating similar molecules that will be more effective drug candidates. It is necessary that algorithms incorporate strategies to measure molecular similarity by comparing molecular descriptors that may involve dozens to hundreds of attributes. We use kernel-based methods to define these measures of similarity. Kernels are general functions that can be used to formulate similarity comparisons. The overall goal of this thesis is to develop effective and efficient computational methods that are reliant on transparent mathematical descriptors of molecules with applications to affinity prediction, detection of multiple binding modes, and generation of new drug leads. While in this thesis we derive computational strategies for the discovery of new drug leads, our approach differs from the traditional ligandbased approach. We have developed novel procedures to calculate inverse mappings and subsequently recover the structure of a potential drug lead. The contributions of this thesis are the following: 1. We propose a vector space model molecular descriptor (VSMMD) based on a vector space model that is suitable for kernel studies in QSAR modeling. Our experiments have provided convincing comparative empirical evidence that our descriptor formulation in conjunction with kernel based regression algorithms can provide sufficient discrimination to predict various biological activities of a molecule with reasonable accuracy. 2. We present a new component selection algorithm KACS (Kernel Alignment Component Selection) based on kernel alignment for a QSAR study. Kernel alignment has been developed as a measure of similarity between two kernel functions. In our algorithm, we refine kernel alignment as an evaluation tool, using recursive component elimination to eventually select the most important components for classification. We have demonstrated empirically and proven theoretically that our algorithm works well for finding the most important components in different QSAR data sets. 3. We extend the VSMMD in conjunction with a kernel based clustering algorithm to the prediction of multiple binding modes, a challenging area of research that has been previously studied by means of time consuming docking simulations. The results reported in this study provide strong empirical evidence that our strategy has enough resolving power to distinguish multiple binding modes through the use of a standard k-means algorithm. 4. We develop a set of reverse engineering strategies for QSAR modeling based on our VSMMD. These strategies include: (a) The use of a kernel feature space algorithm to design or modify descriptor image points in a feature space. (b) The deployment of a pre-image algorithm to map the newly defined descriptor image points in the feature space back to the input space of the descriptors. (c) The design of a probabilistic strategy to convert new descriptors to meaningful chemical graph templates. The most important aspect of these contributions is the presentation of strategies that actually generate the structure of a new drug candidate. While the training set is still used to generate a new image point in the feature space, the reverse engineering strategies just described allows us to develop a new drug candidate that is independent of issues related to probability distribution constraints placed on test set molecules.
3

Novel Methods for Chemical Compound Inference Based on Machine Learning and Mixed Integer Linear Programming / 機械学習と混合整数線形計画法に基づく新しい化合物推定手法

Zhu, Jianshen 25 September 2023 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(情報学) / 甲第24938号 / 情博第849号 / 新制||情||142(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院情報学研究科数理工学専攻 / (主査)准教授 原口 和也, 教授 山下 信雄, 教授 阿久津 達也 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Informatics / Kyoto University / DFAM
4

Cartography of chemical space / Cartographie de l'espace chimique

Gaspar, Héléna Alexandra 29 September 2015 (has links)
Cette thèse est consacrée à la cartographie de l’espace chimique ; son but est d’établir les bases d’un outil donnant une vision d’ensemble d’un jeu de données, comprenant prédiction d’activité, visualisation, et comparaison de grandes librairies. Dans cet ouvrage, nous introduisons des modèles prédictifs QSAR (relations quantitatives structure à activité) avec de nouvelles définitions de domaines d’applicabilité, basés sur la méthode GTM (generative topographic mapping), introduite par C. Bishop et al. Une partie de cette thèse concerne l’étude de grandes librairies de composés chimiques grâce à la méthode GTM incrémentale. Nous introduisons également une nouvelle méthode « Stargate GTM », ou S-GTM, permettant de passer de l’espace des descripteurs chimiques à celui des activités et vice versa, appliquée à la prédiction de profils d’activité ou aux QSAR inverses. / This thesis is dedicated to the cartography of chemical space; our goal is to establish the foundations of a tool offering a complete overview of a chemical dataset, including visualization, activity prediction, and comparison of very large datasets. In this work, we introduce new QSAR models (quantitative structure-activity relationship) based on the GTM method (generative topographic mapping), introduced by C. Bishop et al. A part of this thesis is dedicated to the visualization and analysis of large chemical libraries using the incremental version of GTM. We also introduce a new method coined “Stargate GTM” or S-GTM, which allows us to travel from the space of chemical descriptors to activity space and vice versa; this approach was applied to activity profile prediction and inverse QSAR.

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