BMAILGQMApr 16, 2024

Multi-objective generative AI for designing novel brain-targeting small molecules

arXiv:2407.00004v11 citationsh-index: 2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of central nervous system drug delivery for disorders like psychosis, though it is incremental as it adapts an existing method to a new domain.

The researchers tackled the challenge of designing brain-targeting small molecules by using multi-objective generative AI to generate 26,581 novel compounds with high predicted blood-brain barrier permeability, safety, and binding affinity to the dopamine D2 receptor, achieving predicted binding affinity comparable to the clinical drug risperidone.

The strict selectivity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) represents one of the most formidable challenges to successful central nervous system (CNS) drug delivery. Computational methods to generate BBB permeable drugs in silico may be valuable tools in the CNS drug design pipeline. However, in real-world applications, BBB penetration alone is insufficient; rather, after transiting the BBB, molecules must bind to a specific target or receptor in the brain and must also be safe and non-toxic. To discover small molecules that concurrently satisfy these constraints, we use multi-objective generative AI to synthesize drug-like BBB-permeable small molecules. Specifically, we computationally synthesize molecules with predicted binding affinity against dopamine receptor D2, the primary target for many clinically effective antipsychotic drugs. After training several graph neural network-based property predictors, we adapt SyntheMol (Swanson et al., 2024), a recently developed Monte Carlo Tree Search-based algorithm for antibiotic design, to perform a multi-objective guided traversal over an easily synthesizable molecular space. We design a library of 26,581 novel and diverse small molecules containing hits with high predicted BBB permeability and favorable predicted safety and toxicity profiles, and that could readily be synthesized for experimental validation in the wet lab. We also validate top scoring molecules with molecular docking simulation against the D2 receptor and demonstrate predicted binding affinity on par with risperidone, a clinically prescribed D2-targeting antipsychotic. In the future, the SyntheMol-based computational approach described here may enable the discovery of novel neurotherapeutics for currently intractable disorders of the CNS.

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