A few days ago, GSK released an approximately 13,000 member compound library (using the CC0 license) that had been tested for activity against P. falciparum. The structures and data have been deposited into ChEMBL and a paper is available, that describes the screening project and results. Following this announcement there was a thread on FriendFeed, where […]
RNAi in PubChem
While considering ways to disseminate RNAi screening data, I found out that PubChem now contains two RNAi screening datasets – AIDs 1622 and 1904. These screens reuse the PubChem bioaassay formats – which is both good and bad. For example, while there are a few standardized columns (such as PUBCHEM_ACTIVITY_SCORE), the bulk of the user […]
When is a Bad Plate Bad?
When running a high-throughput screen, one usually deals with hundreds or even thousands of plates. Due to the vagaries of experiments, some plates will not be ervy good. That is, the data will be of poor quality due to a variety of reasons. Usually we can evaluate various statistical quality metrics to asses which plates […]
Plate Well Series Plots in R
Plate well series plots are a common way to summarize well level data across multiple plates in a high throughput screen. An example can be seen in Zhang et al. As I’ve been working with RNAi screens, this visualization has been a useful way to summarize screening data and the various transformations on that data. […]
Hit Selection Methods for RNAi Screens
Over the last few weeks I’ve been getting up to speed on RNAi screening (see Lord et al for a nice overview) and one of the key features in this approach is to reliably select hits for followup. In many ways it is similar to hit selection in small molecule HTS but also employs techniques […]