期刊论文详细信息
Journal of Cheminformatics
Randomized SMILES strings improve the quality of molecular generative models
Jean-Louis Reymond1  Oleksii Prykhodko2  Simon Viet Johansson2  Josep Arús-Pous2  Ola Engkvist2  Hongming Chen2  Esben Jannik Bjerrum2  Christian Tyrchan3 
[1] Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Bern;Hit Discovery, Discovery Sciences, R&D, AstraZeneca Gothenburg;Medicinal Chemistry, BioPharmaceuticals Early RIA, R&D, AstraZeneca Gothenburg;
关键词: Deep learning;    Generative models;    SMILES;    Randomized SMILES;    Recurrent Neural Networks;    Chemical databases;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s13321-019-0393-0
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs) trained with a set of molecules represented as unique (canonical) SMILES strings, have shown the capacity to create large chemical spaces of valid and meaningful structures. Herein we perform an extensive benchmark on models trained with subsets of GDB-13 of different sizes (1 million, 10,000 and 1000), with different SMILES variants (canonical, randomized and DeepSMILES), with two different recurrent cell types (LSTM and GRU) and with different hyperparameter combinations. To guide the benchmarks new metrics were developed that define how well a model has generalized the training set. The generated chemical space is evaluated with respect to its uniformity, closedness and completeness. Results show that models that use LSTM cells trained with 1 million randomized SMILES, a non-unique molecular string representation, are able to generalize to larger chemical spaces than the other approaches and they represent more accurately the target chemical space. Specifically, a model was trained with randomized SMILES that was able to generate almost all molecules from GDB-13 with a quasi-uniform probability. Models trained with smaller samples show an even bigger improvement when trained with randomized SMILES models. Additionally, models were trained on molecules obtained from ChEMBL and illustrate again that training with randomized SMILES lead to models having a better representation of the drug-like chemical space. Namely, the model trained with randomized SMILES was able to generate at least double the amount of unique molecules with the same distribution of properties comparing to one trained with canonical SMILES.

【 授权许可】

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