The Synthesizability of Molecules Proposed by Generative Models

The discovery of functional molecules is an expensive and time-consuming process, exemplified by the rising costs of small molecule therapeutic discovery. One class of techniques of growing interest for early stage drug discovery is de novo molecular generation and optimization, catalyzed by the dev...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of chemical information and modeling Vol. 60; no. 12; pp. 5714 - 5723
Main Authors Gao, Wenhao, Coley, Connor W
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 28.12.2020
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ISSN1549-9596
1549-960X
1549-960X
DOI10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00174

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Summary:The discovery of functional molecules is an expensive and time-consuming process, exemplified by the rising costs of small molecule therapeutic discovery. One class of techniques of growing interest for early stage drug discovery is de novo molecular generation and optimization, catalyzed by the development of new deep learning approaches. These techniques can suggest novel molecular structures intended to maximize a multiobjective function, e.g., suitability as a therapeutic against a particular target, without relying on brute-force exploration of a chemical space. However, the utility of these approaches is stymied by ignorance of synthesizability. To highlight the severity of this issue, we use a data-driven computer-aided synthesis planning program to quantify how often molecules proposed by state-of-the-art generative models cannot be readily synthesized. Our analysis demonstrates that there are several tasks for which these models generate unrealistic molecular structures despite performing well on popular quantitative benchmarks. Synthetic complexity heuristics can successfully bias generation toward synthetically tractable chemical space, although doing so necessarily detracts from the primary objective. This analysis suggests that to improve the utility of these models in real discovery workflows, new algorithm development is warranted.
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ISSN:1549-9596
1549-960X
1549-960X
DOI:10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00174