Abstract

High-throughput biology has contributed a wealth of data on chemicals, including natural products (NPs). Recently, attention was drawn to certain, predominantly synthetic, compounds that are responsible for disproportionate percentages of hits but are false actives. Spurious bioassay interference led to their designation as pan-assay interference compounds (PAINS). NPs lack comparable scrutiny, which this study aims to rectify. Systematic mining of 80+ years of the phytochemistry and biology literature, using the NAPRALERT database, revealed that only 39 compounds represent the NPs most reported by occurrence, activity, and distinct activity. Over 50% are not explained by phenomena known for synthetic libraries, and all had manifold ascribed bioactivities, designating them as invalid metabolic panaceas (IMPs). Cumulative distributions of ∼200,000 NPs uncovered that NP research follows power-law characteristics typical for behavioral phenomena. Projection into occurrence-bioactivity-effort space produces the hyperbolic black hole of NPs, where IMPs populate the high-effort base.

Keywords

Spurious relationshipDrug discoveryNatural productChemistryScrutinyChemical spaceComputational biologyBiochemical engineeringComputer scienceBiologyMachine learningBiochemistryLaw

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Publication Info

Year
2015
Type
review
Volume
59
Issue
5
Pages
1671-1690
Citations
232
Access
Closed

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Jonathan Bisson, James B. McAlpine, J. Brent Friesen et al. (2015). Can Invalid Bioactives Undermine Natural Product-Based Drug Discovery?. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry , 59 (5) , 1671-1690. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01009

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DOI
10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01009