Back to Search Start Over

Chemical Graphs, Molecular Matrices and Topological Indices in Chemoinformatics and Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationships§

Authors :
Ovidiu Ivanciuc
Source :
Current Computer Aided-Drug Design. 9:153-163
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., 2013.

Abstract

Chemical and molecular graphs have fundamental applications in chemoinformatics, quantitative structureproperty relationships (QSPR), quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR), virtual screening of chemical libraries, and computational drug design. Chemoinformatics applications of graphs include chemical structure representation and coding, database search and retrieval, and physicochemical property prediction. QSPR, QSAR and virtual screening are based on the structure-property principle, which states that the physicochemical and biological properties of chemical compounds can be predicted from their chemical structure. Such structure-property correlations are usually developed from topological indices and fingerprints computed from the molecular graph and from molecular descriptors computed from the three-dimensional chemical structure. We present here a selection of the most important graph descriptors and topological indices, including molecular matrices, graph spectra, spectral moments, graph polynomials, and vertex topological indices. These graph descriptors are used to define several topological indices based on molecular connectivity, graph distance, reciprocal distance, distance-degree, distance-valency, spectra, polynomials, and information theory concepts. The molecular descriptors and topological indices can be developed with a more general approach, based on molecular graph operators, which define a family of graph indices related by a common formula. Graph descriptors and topological indices for molecules containing heteroatoms and multiple bonds are computed with weighting schemes based on atomic properties, such as the atomic number, covalent radius, or electronegativity. The correlation in QSPR and QSAR models can be improved by optimizing some parameters in the formula of topological indices, as demonstrated for structural descriptors based on atomic connectivity and graph distance.

Details

ISSN :
15734099
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Computer Aided-Drug Design
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b783c8f6f61d072205aed7978b214eb7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2174/1573409911309020002