6 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2018
    1. On 2017 Mar 27, Christopher Southan commented:

      There was tutorial on this theme at the 2017 International Conference on Trends for Scientific Information (ICIC) https://www.slideshare.net/Haxel/icic-2017-tutorial-digging-bioactive-chemistry-out-of-patents-using-open-resources/1


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    2. On 2016 Jan 25, Dimitrios Tzalis commented:

      The ELF Public Compound Collection (PCC) is a very unique collection of compounds that are already synthesized and available for screening within ELF Screening Campaign. The goal of the paper was to compare the PCC with other compounds that are available for biological screening or that were actually screened. That is why, with a full awareness, we have analyzed the PCC against part of the PubChem collection called MLP of NIH, commercially available Maybridge and already tested compounds represented by ChEMBL. It might be interesting to collate the PCC and the 15 millions of patent-extracted compounds, in respect to broadly understood novelty, but we wanted to avoid the contamination of our comparison with theoretical compounds. In such a way the work is much more consistent. Nevertheless, thank you for your valuable comment and we can think of extending our novelty check also in respect to theoretical compounds in the future analysis since our collection is still growing. We believe that by focusing on exploring underrepresented chemical space of spiro-compounds and saturated, fused hetero rings we are offering a very competitive and unprecedented collection.


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    3. On 2015 Jul 22, Christopher Southan commented:

      This is part of a special issue "From chemistry to biology database curation" http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/17406749/14/supp/C. The PubMed ID series is 26194580-6.


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  2. Feb 2018
    1. On 2015 Jul 22, Christopher Southan commented:

      This is part of a special issue "From chemistry to biology database curation" http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/17406749/14/supp/C. The PubMed ID series is 26194580-6.


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.

    2. On 2016 Jan 25, Dimitrios Tzalis commented:

      The ELF Public Compound Collection (PCC) is a very unique collection of compounds that are already synthesized and available for screening within ELF Screening Campaign. The goal of the paper was to compare the PCC with other compounds that are available for biological screening or that were actually screened. That is why, with a full awareness, we have analyzed the PCC against part of the PubChem collection called MLP of NIH, commercially available Maybridge and already tested compounds represented by ChEMBL. It might be interesting to collate the PCC and the 15 millions of patent-extracted compounds, in respect to broadly understood novelty, but we wanted to avoid the contamination of our comparison with theoretical compounds. In such a way the work is much more consistent. Nevertheless, thank you for your valuable comment and we can think of extending our novelty check also in respect to theoretical compounds in the future analysis since our collection is still growing. We believe that by focusing on exploring underrepresented chemical space of spiro-compounds and saturated, fused hetero rings we are offering a very competitive and unprecedented collection.


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.

    3. On 2017 Mar 27, Christopher Southan commented:

      There was tutorial on this theme at the 2017 International Conference on Trends for Scientific Information (ICIC) https://www.slideshare.net/Haxel/icic-2017-tutorial-digging-bioactive-chemistry-out-of-patents-using-open-resources/1


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.