Predicted protein targets (top 1)
| gene | UniProt | supporting neighbours | confidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ▸ | CTSS | P25774 | 1/20 | 0.35 |
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.
| Compound | similarity | top predicted | shared targets | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCHEMBL3536323 | 0.86 | POLB (0.34) | CTSS | |
| SCHEMBL3535620 | 0.81 | CTSS (0.34) | CTSS | |
| SCHEMBL3531853 | 0.79 | SCN5A (0.34) | — | |
| SCHEMBL3529916 | 0.79 | NR3C1 (0.34) | CTSS | |
| SCHEMBL3530597 | 0.75 | ALDH1A1 (0.43) | CTSS | |
| SCHEMBL3530604 | 0.75 | CTSS (0.36) | CTSS | |
| SCHEMBL3536773 | 0.73 | MEN1 (0.44) | — | |
| SCHEMBL1775737 | 0.73 | NR3C1 (0.52) | — | |
| SCHEMBL3537468 | 0.73 | NR3C1 (0.39) | — | |
| SCHEMBL3533947 | 0.70 | NR3C1 (0.43) | — |
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 6 patents. claimed = in the patent's claims; disclosed = body only.
| Patent | Title | Assignee | Published | Priority | Filing | Country | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US-7662821-B2 | improved selectivity and pharmacokinetic properties; 6-Fluoro-1-[(1 H-indazol-4-yl)amino]-4,4-dimethyl-2-(trifluoromethyl)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene-2,5-diol; cyclization of imines | BAYER SCHERING PHARMA AG (DE) | 2010-02-16 | — | — | US | disclosed |
| US-7659297-B2 | improved selectivity and pharmacokinetic properties; 6-Fluoro-1-[(1 H-indazol-4-yl)amino]-4,4-dimethyl-2-(trifluoromethyl)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene-2,5-diol; cyclization of imines | Bayer Schering Pharma, AG (DE) | 2010-02-09 | — | — | US | disclosed |
| US-7638515-B2 | improved selectivity and pharmacokinetic properties; 6-Fluoro-1-[(1 H-indazol-4-yl)amino]-4,4-dimethyl-2-(trifluoromethyl)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene-2,5-diol; cyclization of imines | BAYER SCHERING PHARMA AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (DE) | 2009-12-29 | — | — | US | disclosed |
| US-20050272823-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | BAYER SCHERING PHARMA AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (DE) | 2005-12-08 | — | — | US | disclosed |
| US-20050209324-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | BAYER SCHERING PHARMA AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (DE) | 2005-09-22 | — | — | US | disclosed |
| US-20050171109-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | BAYER SCHERING PHARMA AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (DE) | 2005-08-04 | — | — | 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 (3 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.
| Patent | Title | Text reads most about | Predicted target · text-rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| US-20050171109-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | TNF, DHPS, PTGES | CTSS 1878/4885 |
| US-20050272823-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | DHPS, TNF, PTGES | CTSS 1834/4885 |
| US-20050209324-A1 | Tetrahydronaphthalene derivatives, process for their production and their use as anti-inflammatory agents | TNF, DHPS, PTGES | CTSS 1878/4885 |
“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.