Estimating the synthetic accessibility of molecules with building block and reaction-aware SAScore

Author:

Chen Shuan,Jung Yousung

Abstract

AbstractSynthetic accessibility prediction is a task to estimate how easily a given molecule might be synthesizable in the laboratory, playing a crucial role in computer-aided molecular design. Although synthesis planning programs can determine synthesis routes, their slow processing times make them impractical for large-scale molecule screening. On the other hand, existing rapid synthesis accessibility estimation methods offer speed but typically lack integration with actual synthesis routes and building block information. In this work, we introduce BR-SAScore, an enhanced version of SAScore that integrates the available building block information (B) and reaction knowledge (R) from synthesis planning programs into the scoring process. In particular, we differentiate fragments inherent in building blocks and fragments to be derived from synthesis (reactions) when scoring synthetic accessibility. Compared to existing methods, our experimental findings demonstrate that BR-SAScore offers more accurate and precise identification of a molecule's synthetic accessibility by the synthesis planning program with a fast calculation time. Moreover, we illustrate how BR-SAScore provides chemically interpretable results, aligning with the capability of the synthesis planning program embedded with the same reaction knowledge and available building blocks.Scientific contributionWe introduce BR-SAScore, an extension of SAScore, to estimate the synthetic accessibility of molecules by leveraging known building-block and reactivity information. In our experiments, BR-SAScore shows superior prediction performance on predicting molecule synthetic accessibility compared to previous methods, including SAScore and deep-learning models, while requiring significantly less computation time. In addition, we show that BR-SAScore is able to precisely identify the chemical fragment contributing to the synthetic infeasibility, holding great potential for future molecule synthesizability optimization.

Funder

IITP Korea

SNU startup funding

SNU Institute of Engineering Research startup funding

Samyang Corp.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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