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Articles

An automated curation procedure for addressing chemical errors and inconsistencies in public datasets used in QSAR modellingFootnote$

, , , &
Pages 911-937 | Received 03 Sep 2016, Accepted 24 Oct 2016, Published online: 25 Nov 2016
 

Abstract

The increasing availability of large collections of chemical structures and associated experimental data provides an opportunity to build robust QSAR models for applications in different fields. One common concern is the quality of both the chemical structure information and associated experimental data. Here we describe the development of an automated KNIME workflow to curate and correct errors in the structure and identity of chemicals using the publicly available PHYSPROP physicochemical properties and environmental fate datasets. The workflow first assembles structure–identity pairs using up to four provided chemical identifiers, including chemical name, CASRNs, SMILES, and MolBlock. Problems detected included errors and mismatches in chemical structure formats, identifiers and various structure validation issues, including hypervalency and stereochemistry descriptions. Subsequently, a machine learning procedure was applied to evaluate the impact of this curation process. The performance of QSAR models built on only the highest-quality subset of the original dataset was compared with the larger curated and corrected dataset. The latter showed statistically improved predictive performance. The final workflow was used to curate the full list of PHYSPROP datasets, and is being made publicly available for further usage and integration by the scientific community.

Notes

$ Presented at the 17th International Conference on QSAR in Environmental and Health Sciences (QSAR 2016), 13-17 June 2016, Miami Beach, FL, USA.

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