Comparison of the NCI Open Database with Seven Large Chemical Structural Databases
- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences
- Vol. 41 (3) , 702-712
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ci000150t
Abstract
Eight large chemical databases have been analyzed and compared to each other. Central to this comparison is the open National Cancer Institute (NCI) database, consisting of approximately 250 000 structures. The other databases analyzed are the Available Chemicals Directory (“ACD,” from MDL, release 1.99, 3D-version); the ChemACX (“ACX,” from CamSoft, Version 4.5); the Maybridge Catalog and the Asinex database (both as distributed by CamSoft as part of ChemInfo 4.5); the Sigma-Aldrich Catalog (CD-ROM, 1999 Version); the World Drug Index (“WDI,” Derwent, version 1999.03); and the organic part of the Cambridge Crystallographic Database (“CSD,” from Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center, 1999 Version 5.18). The database properties analyzed are internal duplication rates; compounds unique to each database; cumulative occurrence of compounds in an increasing number of databases; overlap of identical compounds between two databases; similarity overlap; diversity; and others. The crystallographic database CSD and the WDI show somewhat less overlap with the other databases than those with each other. In particular the collections of commercial compounds and compilations of vendor catalogs have a substantial degree of overlap among each other. Still, no database is completely a subset of any other, and each appears to have its own niche and thus “raison d'être”. The NCI database has by far the highest number of compounds that are unique to it. Approximately 200 000 of the NCI structures were not found in any of the other analyzed databases.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Potential Drugs and Nondrugs: Prediction and Identification of Important Structural FeaturesJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 2000
- Comparison of chemical databases: Analysis of molecular diversity with Self Organising Maps (SOM)Analusis, 1998
- Lead Discovery Using Stochastic Cluster Analysis (SCA): A New Method for Clustering Structurally Similar CompoundsJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1998
- Clustering of Large Databases of Compounds: Using the MDL “Keys” as Structural DescriptorsJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1997
- Molecular Diversity in Chemical Databases: Comparison of Medicinal Chemistry Knowledge Bases and Databases of Commercially Available CompoundsJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1996
- Description of several chemical structure file formats used by computer programs developed at Molecular Design LimitedJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1992
- The NCI Drug Information System. 6. System maintenanceJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1986
- The NCI Drug Information System. 4. Inventory and shipping modulesJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1986
- The NCI Drug Information System. 3. The DIS chemistry moduleJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1986
- The NCI Drug Information System. 2. DIS pre-registryJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1986