Chemical Space Exploration

Chemical Space Exploration

Chemical Space exploration comes in different shapes and colors and can be roughly divided into two camps: the construction of Chemical Spaces and the directed search within those. The aim of the first is to build up a collection of molecules or chemical entities that either exhausts all possibilities or covers a focused part of the total. Once generated, Chemical Spaces can be searched for molecules with specific properties that comply with the needs of the projects (e.g., drug discovery, chemical catalysts, cosmetics, etc.).
We have collected some aspects and examples of the Chemical Space exploration with applications from drug discovery and medicinal chemistry.

Accelerated Structure-Activity Relationship Elucidation

Klingler et al. introduced the concept of "SAR by Space" (SAR = structure-activity relationship; you may have heard of "SAR by NMR" by Abbott, or "SAR by Catalog" by Astex). This method aims to accelerate early stages of drug discovery by utilizing the accessibility of compounds from vendors. The premise is simple: Starting with a query molecule, scientists can search in vast make-on-demand Chemical Spaces for related compounds and analogs. Molecules of interest can be ordered and synthesized within weeks.
This approach has several perks: Companies without in-house facilities can cost-efficiently advance their projects in a short period of time. Furthermore, the increasing number of commercial Chemical Spaces increases diversity and possibilities to find interesting follow-ups.

Ring systems and their bioisosteric replacements

Peter Ertl extracted bioactive ring systems and their respective targets from a billion of drug-like molecules resulting in the creation of a ring Chemical Space with almost 40,000 molecular scaffolds.
Rings represent privileged motives in medicinal chemistry as they define the shape of the molecule, are responsible for the orientation of attached groups and often contribute to the binding affinity on their own. Yet sometimes ring replacement (also described as scaffold replacement) is required due to promiscuity of the system, unfavored physicochemical properties, toxicity issues, or intellectual property claims.

BioSolveIT software tackles this problem with the scaffold replacement tool ReCore and infiniSee that performs fuzzy pharmacophore search for distant neighbors to a query molecule.
The interactive browser application from the publication can be accessed here.
Navigation in the Ring Chemical Space Guided by the Bioactive Rings.
Ertl, P.
J. Chem. Inf. Model. 2021.

Enumeration of accessible molecules

The Reymond group from the University of Bern in Switzerland made their efforts to enumerate small organic molecules leading to the GDB databases. The numbering of the data sets specifies how many heavy atoms were used for the construction of the Chemical Space. Users can use the sets for virtual screening (e.g. with SeeSAR or FlexX) to search for synthetically accessible compounds.
Enumerated data sets require a vast amount of storage to be processed. Hits from combinatorial spaces on the other hand are built up during the search, thus lowering the computational requirements.
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Events
Upcoming Lunch Workshops in San Diego & San Francisco
July 4, 2025 16:30 CEST
Why not make good use of an extended lunch break for a change? Join the BioSolveIT team for two informal lunch events in San Diego and San Francisco, featuring a short workshop on efficient strategies for exploring chemical space and processing large molecular datasets — key topics in early-stage drug...
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Announcing BioSolveIT's DrugSpace Symposium 2025: Bridging Science
June 26, 2025 09:43 CEST
We are pleased to announce the fourth edition of the BioSolveIT DrugSpace Symposium, taking place on September 24–25, 2025. This year’s theme, “Bridging Science,” highlights the growing importance of interdisciplinary collaboration in driving innovation across the drug discovery landscape. As the field evolves, it becomes increasingly clear that real progress...
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June 25, 2025 08:44 CEST
There’s a lot going on behind the scenes—ideas taking shape, tools evolving, science in motion. And while the website tells you what our software does, our social media gives you a look at how it lives. We’re active on LinkedIn, BlueSky, and YouTube, sharing everything from scientific snapshots to educational...
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