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In Journal of biomolecular structure & dynamics

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by a series of disabling symptoms like anhedonia, depressed mood, lack of motivation for daily tasks and self-extermination thoughts. The monoamine deficiency hypothesis states that depression is mainly caused by a deficiency of monoamine at the synaptic cleft. Thus, major efforts have been made to develop drugs that inhibit serotonin (SERT), norepinephrine (NET) and dopamine (DAT) transporters and increase the availability of these monoamines. Current gold standard treatment of MDD uses drugs that target one or more monoamine transporters. Triple reuptake inhibitors (TRIs) can target SERT, NET, and DAT simultaneously, and are believed to have the potential to be early onset antidepressants. Quantitative structure-activity relationship models were developed using machine learning algorithms in order to predict biological activities of a series of triple reuptake inhibitor compounds that showed in vitro inhibitory activity against multiple targets. The results, using mostly interpretable descriptors, showed that the internal and external predictive ability of the models are adequate, particularly of the DAT and NET by Random Forest and Support Vector Machine models. The current work shows that models developed from relatively simple, chemically interpretable descriptors can predict the activity of TRIs with similar structure in the applicability domain using ML methods.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.

Sousa Gustavo Henrique Marques, Gomes Renan Augusto, de Oliveira Eliseu Ortega, Trossini Gustavo Henrique Goulart

2022-Dec-22

QSAR, Random Forest, Support Vector Machine, Triple reuptake inhibitors, computer aided-drug design, machine-learning