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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10525/4402

Title: Hybrid Classification/Regression Approach to QSAR Modeling of Stoichiometric Antiradical Capacity Assays' Endpoints
Authors: Alov, Petko
Tsakovska, Ivanka
Pajeva, Ilza
Keywords: antiradical capacity assays
ABTS
DPPH
TEAC
stoichiometric endpoint
QSAR
classification/regression approach
Issue Date: 24-Mar-2022
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Alov,P.; Tsakovska,I.; Pajeva,I. Hybrid Classification/Regression Approach to QSAR Modeling of Stoichiometric Antiradical Capacity Assays’ Endpoints. Molecules, 2022, 27, 2084. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27072084
Series/Report no.: Molecules;27, 2084
Abstract: Quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) are a widely used methodology allowing not only a better understanding of the mechanisms of chemical reactions, including radical scavenging, but also to predict the relevant properties of chemical compounds without their synthesis, isolation and experimental testing. Unlike the QSAR modeling of the kinetic antioxidant assays, modeling of the assays with stoichiometric endpoints depends strongly on the number of hydroxyl groups in the antioxidant molecule, as well as on some integral molecular descriptors characterizing the proportion of OH-groups able to enter and complete the radical scavenging reaction. In this work, we tested the feasibility of a "hybrid" classification/regression approach, consisting of explicit classification of individual OH-groups as involved in radical scavenging reactions, and using further the number of these OH-groups as a descriptor in simple-regression QSAR models of antiradical capacity assays with stoichiometric endpoints. A simple threshold classification based on the sum of trolox-equivalent antiradical capacity values was used, selecting OH-groups with specific radical stability- and reactivity-related electronic parameters or their combination as "active" or "inactive". We showed that this classification/regression modeling approach provides a substantial improvement of the simple-regression QSAR models over those built on the number of total phenolic OH-groups only, and yields a statistical performance similar to that of the best reported multiple-regression QSARs for antiradical capacity assays with stoichiometric endpoints.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10525/4402
ISSN: 1420-3049
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