Quantitative Structure–Activity Relationship (QSAR) Modeling of Chiral CCR2 Antagonists with a Multidimensional Space of Novel Chirality Descriptors

The development of chirality descriptors for quantitative chirality structure–activity relationship (QCSAR) modeling has always attracted attention, owing to the importance of chiral molecules in pharmaceutical, agriculture, food, and fragrance industries, and environmental toxicology. The utility o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ramanathan Natarajan, Ganapathy S. Natarajan, Subhash C. Basak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
Series:Molecules
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/30/2/307
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Summary:The development of chirality descriptors for quantitative chirality structure–activity relationship (QCSAR) modeling has always attracted attention, owing to the importance of chiral molecules in pharmaceutical, agriculture, food, and fragrance industries, and environmental toxicology. The utility of a multidimensional space of novel relative chirality indices (RCIs) in the QCSAR modeling of twenty CCR2 antagonists is reported upon in this paper. The numerical characterization of chirality by the RCI approach gives a large pool of chirality descriptors with different degrees of mutual correlation (the correlation coefficient among the computed descriptors varied from 0.02 to 0.99). In the present study, the final data set contains 198 chirality descriptors for each of the twenty CCR2 antagonist molecules, providing a multidimensional space for modeling. The data reduction using principal component analysis resulted in the extraction of eight principal components (PCs). The linear regression using the principal component scores (PCSs) resulted in a three-predictor prediction model with good statistics: R<sup>2</sup> = 0.823; Adj R<sup>2</sup> = 0.790. The regression models were rebuilt using the chirality descriptors (RCIs) that are most correlated with each of the scores (PCSs) of the three principal components. The R<sup>2</sup> value for the regression models with three RCIs as the predictors is 0.742 and the five-fold cross validation, R<sub>cv</sub><sup>2</sup>, is 0.839. The new chirality descriptors, namely, the RCIs calculated using a different weighting scheme, provide a multidimensional space of chirality descriptors for a set of chiral molecules, and such a multidimensional chirality space is a powerful tool to build quantitative chiral structure–activity relationship (QCSAR) models.
ISSN:1420-3049