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Orginal Article

Selection of appropriate training and validation set chemicals for modelling dermal permeability by U-optimal design

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Pages 135-156 | Received 10 Sep 2012, Accepted 18 Oct 2012, Published online: 16 Nov 2012
 

Abstract

Quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models are being used increasingly in skin permeation studies. The main idea of QSAR modelling is to quantify the relationship between biological activities and chemical properties, and thus to predict the activity of chemical solutes. As a key step, the selection of a representative and structurally diverse training set is critical to the prediction power of a QSAR model. Early QSAR models selected training sets in a subjective way and solutes in the training set were relatively homogenous. More recently, statistical methods such as D-optimal design or space-filling design have been applied but such methods are not always ideal. This paper describes a comprehensive procedure to select training sets from a large candidate set of 4534 solutes. A newly proposed ‘Baynes’ rule’, which is a modification of Lipinski's ‘rule of five’, was used to screen out solutes that were not qualified for the study. U-optimality was used as the selection criterion. A principal component analysis showed that the selected training set was representative of the chemical space. Gas chromatograph amenability was verified. A model built using the training set was shown to have greater predictive power than a model built using a previous dataset [1].

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express their gratitude to the reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions. This research was funded by the NIOSH grant #OH-003669.

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