A predictive model for drug bioaccumulation and bioactivity in Caenorhabditis elegans

Chemical screening in C. elegans is limited by the relatively poor target accessibility of small molecules. A systematic survey of drug-like small molecule accumulation and metabolism in C. elegans was used to create a computational tool for preselecting compounds likely to effectively perturb worms...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemical biology 2010-07, Vol.6 (7), p.549-557
Hauptverfasser: Roy, Peter J, Burns, Andrew R, Wallace, Iain M, Wildenhain, Jan, Tyers, Mike, Giaever, Guri, Bader, Gary D, Nislow, Corey, Cutler, Sean R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chemical screening in C. elegans is limited by the relatively poor target accessibility of small molecules. A systematic survey of drug-like small molecule accumulation and metabolism in C. elegans was used to create a computational tool for preselecting compounds likely to effectively perturb worms. The resistance of Caenorhabditis elegans to pharmacological perturbation limits its use as a screening tool for novel small bioactive molecules. One strategy to improve the hit rate of small-molecule screens is to preselect molecules that have an increased likelihood of reaching their target in the worm. To learn which structures evade the worm's defenses, we performed the first survey of the accumulation and metabolism of over 1,000 commercially available drug-like small molecules in the worm. We discovered that fewer than 10% of these molecules accumulate to concentrations greater than 50% of that present in the worm's environment. Using our dataset, we developed a structure-based accumulation model that identifies compounds with an increased likelihood of bioavailability and bioactivity, and we describe structural features that facilitate small-molecule accumulation in the worm. Preselecting molecules that are more likely to reach a target by first applying our model to the tens of millions of commercially available compounds will undoubtedly increase the success of future small-molecule screens with C. elegans.
ISSN:1552-4450
1552-4469
DOI:10.1038/nchembio.380