Issue 31, 2022

Root-aligned SMILES: a tight representation for chemical reaction prediction

Abstract

Chemical reaction prediction, involving forward synthesis and retrosynthesis prediction, is a fundamental problem in organic synthesis. A popular computational paradigm formulates synthesis prediction as a sequence-to-sequence translation problem, where the typical SMILES is adopted for molecule representations. However, the general-purpose SMILES neglects the characteristics of chemical reactions, where the molecular graph topology is largely unaltered from reactants to products, resulting in the suboptimal performance of SMILES if straightforwardly applied. In this article, we propose the root-aligned SMILES (R-SMILES), which specifies a tightly aligned one-to-one mapping between the product and the reactant SMILES for more efficient synthesis prediction. Due to the strict one-to-one mapping and reduced edit distance, the computational model is largely relieved from learning the complex syntax and dedicated to learning the chemical knowledge for reactions. We compare the proposed R-SMILES with various state-of-the-art baselines and show that it significantly outperforms them all, demonstrating the superiority of the proposed method.

Graphical abstract: Root-aligned SMILES: a tight representation for chemical reaction prediction

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
17 May 2022
Accepted
11 Jul 2022
First published
12 Jul 2022
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2022,13, 9023-9034

Root-aligned SMILES: a tight representation for chemical reaction prediction

Z. Zhong, J. Song, Z. Feng, T. Liu, L. Jia, S. Yao, M. Wu, T. Hou and M. Song, Chem. Sci., 2022, 13, 9023 DOI: 10.1039/D2SC02763A

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