Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.

Mental illnesses put a tremendous burden on afflicted individuals and society. Identification of novel drugs to treat such conditions is intrinsically challenging due to the complexity of neuropsychiatric diseases and the need for a systems-level understanding that goes beyond single molecule-target...

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Main Authors: Danielle Ireland, Christina Rabeler, Sagar Rao, Rudy J Richardson, Eva-Maria S Collins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315394
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author Danielle Ireland
Christina Rabeler
Sagar Rao
Rudy J Richardson
Eva-Maria S Collins
author_facet Danielle Ireland
Christina Rabeler
Sagar Rao
Rudy J Richardson
Eva-Maria S Collins
author_sort Danielle Ireland
collection DOAJ
description Mental illnesses put a tremendous burden on afflicted individuals and society. Identification of novel drugs to treat such conditions is intrinsically challenging due to the complexity of neuropsychiatric diseases and the need for a systems-level understanding that goes beyond single molecule-target interactions. Thus far, drug discovery approaches focused on target-based in silico or in vitro high-throughput screening (HTS) have had limited success because they cannot capture pathway interactions or predict how a compound will affect the whole organism. Organismal behavioral testing is needed to fill the gap, but mammalian studies are too time-consuming and cost-prohibitive for the early stages of drug discovery. Behavioral medium-throughput screening (MTS) in small organisms promises to address this need and complement in silico and in vitro HTS to improve the discovery of novel neuroactive compounds. Here, we used cheminformatics and MTS in the freshwater planarian Dugesia japonica-an invertebrate system used for neurotoxicant testing-to evaluate the extent to which complementary insight could be gained from the two data streams. In this pilot study, our goal was to classify 19 neuroactive compounds into their functional categories: antipsychotics, anxiolytics, and antidepressants. Drug classification was performed with the same computational methods, using either physicochemical descriptors or planarian behavioral profiling. As it was not obvious a priori which classification method was most suited to this task, we compared the performance of four classification approaches. We used principal coordinate analysis or uniform manifold approximation and projection, each coupled with linear discriminant analysis, and two types of machine learning models-artificial neural net ensembles and support vector machines. Classification based on physicochemical properties had comparable accuracy to classification based on planarian profiling, especially with the machine learning models that all had accuracies of 90-100%. Planarian behavioral MTS correctly identified drugs with multiple therapeutic uses, thus yielding additional information compared to cheminformatics. Given that planarian behavioral MTS is an inexpensive true 3R (refine, reduce, replace) alternative to vertebrate testing and requires zero a priori knowledge about a chemical, it is a promising experimental system to complement in silico cheminformatics to identify new drug candidates.
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spelling doaj-art-5c90a4c63fe0460aab01c507a892d3b62025-02-07T05:30:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031539410.1371/journal.pone.0315394Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.Danielle IrelandChristina RabelerSagar RaoRudy J RichardsonEva-Maria S CollinsMental illnesses put a tremendous burden on afflicted individuals and society. Identification of novel drugs to treat such conditions is intrinsically challenging due to the complexity of neuropsychiatric diseases and the need for a systems-level understanding that goes beyond single molecule-target interactions. Thus far, drug discovery approaches focused on target-based in silico or in vitro high-throughput screening (HTS) have had limited success because they cannot capture pathway interactions or predict how a compound will affect the whole organism. Organismal behavioral testing is needed to fill the gap, but mammalian studies are too time-consuming and cost-prohibitive for the early stages of drug discovery. Behavioral medium-throughput screening (MTS) in small organisms promises to address this need and complement in silico and in vitro HTS to improve the discovery of novel neuroactive compounds. Here, we used cheminformatics and MTS in the freshwater planarian Dugesia japonica-an invertebrate system used for neurotoxicant testing-to evaluate the extent to which complementary insight could be gained from the two data streams. In this pilot study, our goal was to classify 19 neuroactive compounds into their functional categories: antipsychotics, anxiolytics, and antidepressants. Drug classification was performed with the same computational methods, using either physicochemical descriptors or planarian behavioral profiling. As it was not obvious a priori which classification method was most suited to this task, we compared the performance of four classification approaches. We used principal coordinate analysis or uniform manifold approximation and projection, each coupled with linear discriminant analysis, and two types of machine learning models-artificial neural net ensembles and support vector machines. Classification based on physicochemical properties had comparable accuracy to classification based on planarian profiling, especially with the machine learning models that all had accuracies of 90-100%. Planarian behavioral MTS correctly identified drugs with multiple therapeutic uses, thus yielding additional information compared to cheminformatics. Given that planarian behavioral MTS is an inexpensive true 3R (refine, reduce, replace) alternative to vertebrate testing and requires zero a priori knowledge about a chemical, it is a promising experimental system to complement in silico cheminformatics to identify new drug candidates.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315394
spellingShingle Danielle Ireland
Christina Rabeler
Sagar Rao
Rudy J Richardson
Eva-Maria S Collins
Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
PLoS ONE
title Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
title_full Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
title_fullStr Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
title_full_unstemmed Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
title_short Distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians.
title_sort distinguishing classes of neuroactive drugs based on computational physicochemical properties and experimental phenotypic profiling in planarians
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315394
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