Back to Search Start Over

Exploring the Use of Compound-Induced Transcriptomic Data Generated From Cell Lines to Predict Compound Activity Toward Molecular Targets.

Authors :
Baillif B
Wichard J
Méndez-Lucio O
Rouquié D
Source :
Frontiers in chemistry [Front Chem] 2020 Apr 23; Vol. 8, pp. 296. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Apr 23 (Print Publication: 2020).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Pharmaceutical or phytopharmaceutical molecules rely on the interaction with one or more specific molecular targets to induce their anticipated biological responses. Nonetheless, these compounds are also prone to interact with many other non-intended biological targets, also known as off-targets. Unfortunately, off-target identification is difficult and expensive. Consequently, QSAR models predicting the activity on a target have gained importance in drug discovery or in the de-risking of chemicals. However, a restricted number of targets are well characterized and hold enough data to build such in silico models. A good alternative to individual target evaluations is to use integrative evaluations such as transcriptomics obtained from compound-induced gene expression measurements derived from cell cultures. The advantage of these particular experiments is to capture the consequences of the interaction of compounds on many possible molecular targets and biological pathways, without having any constraints concerning the chemical space. In this work, we assessed the value of a large public dataset of compound-induced transcriptomic data, to predict compound activity on a selection of 69 molecular targets. We compared such descriptors with other QSAR descriptors, namely the Morgan fingerprints (similar to extended-connectivity fingerprints). Depending on the target, active compounds could show similar signatures in one or multiple cell lines, whether these active compounds shared similar or different chemical structures. Random forest models using gene expression signatures were able to perform similarly or better than counterpart models built with Morgan fingerprints for 25% of the target prediction tasks. These performances occurred mostly using signatures produced in cell lines showing similar signatures for active compounds toward the considered target. We show that compound-induced transcriptomic data could represent a great opportunity for target prediction, allowing to overcome the chemical space limitation of QSAR models.<br /> (Copyright © 2020 Baillif, Wichard, Méndez-Lucio and Rouquié.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2296-2646
Volume :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Frontiers in chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32391323
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.00296