Charles Roberts

2papers

2 Papers

QMFeb 7, 2022
RECOVER: sequential model optimization platform for combination drug repurposing identifies novel synergistic compounds in vitro

Paul Bertin, Jarrid Rector-Brooks, Deepak Sharma et al.

For large libraries of small molecules, exhaustive combinatorial chemical screens become infeasible to perform when considering a range of disease models, assay conditions, and dose ranges. Deep learning models have achieved state of the art results in silico for the prediction of synergy scores. However, databases of drug combinations are biased towards synergistic agents and these results do not necessarily generalise out of distribution. We employ a sequential model optimization search utilising a deep learning model to quickly discover synergistic drug combinations active against a cancer cell line, requiring substantially less screening than an exhaustive evaluation. Our small scale wet lab experiments only account for evaluation of ~5% of the total search space. After only 3 rounds of ML-guided in vitro experimentation (including a calibration round), we find that the set of drug pairs queried is enriched for highly synergistic combinations; two additional rounds of ML-guided experiments were performed to ensure reproducibility of trends. Remarkably, we rediscover drug combinations later confirmed to be under study within clinical trials. Moreover, we find that drug embeddings generated using only structural information begin to reflect mechanisms of action. Prior in silico benchmarking suggests we can enrich search queries by a factor of ~5-10x for highly synergistic drug combinations by using sequential rounds of evaluation when compared to random selection, or by a factor of >3x when using a pretrained model selecting all drug combinations at a single time point.

QMDec 9, 2020
Utilising Graph Machine Learning within Drug Discovery and Development

Thomas Gaudelet, Ben Day, Arian R. Jamasb et al.

Graph Machine Learning (GML) is receiving growing interest within the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries for its ability to model biomolecular structures, the functional relationships between them, and integrate multi-omic datasets - amongst other data types. Herein, we present a multidisciplinary academic-industrial review of the topic within the context of drug discovery and development. After introducing key terms and modelling approaches, we move chronologically through the drug development pipeline to identify and summarise work incorporating: target identification, design of small molecules and biologics, and drug repurposing. Whilst the field is still emerging, key milestones including repurposed drugs entering in vivo studies, suggest graph machine learning will become a modelling framework of choice within biomedical machine learning.