SCHEMBL19658385

SCHEMBL19658385

CC(=O)N(C)CC1CCN(Cc2ccc(Cl)cc2)CC1

nearest known ligand 0.73

Predicted protein targets (top 1)

geneUniProtsupporting neighboursconfidence
ACHE P22303 1/20 0.60

Click a target to see other patent compounds predicted against it — the reverse direction, in place.

Similar compounds — the chemically nearest patent molecules

Nearest neighbours by Morgan-fingerprint cosine across the patent-compound collection, with each neighbour's top predicted target and the predicted targets it shares with this molecule.

Compoundsimilaritytop predictedshared targets
SCHEMBL17753009 0.89 ACHE (0.60) ACHE
SCHEMBL19658388 0.88 ACHE (0.58) ACHE
SCHEMBL4592032 0.88 ACHE (0.58) ACHE
SCHEMBL19658479 0.88 ACHE (0.76) ACHE
SCHEMBL19658606 0.86 ACHE (0.60) ACHE
SCHEMBL19652181 0.86 ACHE (0.50) ACHE
SCHEMBL17754018 0.83 ALDH1A1 (0.59)
SCHEMBL19658602 0.81 CXCR4 (0.59) ACHE
SCHEMBL9477536 0.80 ACHE (0.69) ACHE
SCHEMBL19658389 0.80 ACHE (0.58) ACHE

Similarity is cosine over the 2,048-bit Morgan fingerprint (≈ Tanimoto). Identical fingerprints score 1.00.

Patent provenance — the patents this molecule appears in, and who filed them

Claimed or disclosed in 1 patent. claimed = in the patent's claims; disclosed = body only.

PatentTitleAssigneePublishedPriorityFilingCountryStatus
US-20170340604-A1 THERAPEUTIC COMPOUNDS AND USES THEREOF GENENTECH, INC. (US) 2017-11-30 US disclosed

Patent text — is the patent's own abstract consistent with the prediction?

For each of this compound's patents that has machine-readable text (1 of them — usually the abstract, not the full specification), we ask MedCPT which protein the text reads most about, and where the chemistry-predicted target lands among 4885 human targets. A high rank means the patent's own wording is consistent with the prediction — a weak, independent signal, not proof of activity.

PatentTitleText reads most aboutPredicted target · text-rank
US-20170340604-A1 THERAPEUTIC COMPOUNDS AND USES THEREOF BRD4, BRDT, BRD3 ACHE 2649/4885

“Text reads most about” is the patent abstract's nearest protein in MedCPT space (background-debiased). Only ~1.4% of patents have machine-readable text, so most compounds won't have this panel.