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Network integration and modelling of dynamic drug responses at multi-omics levels

Authors :
Witold Wolski
Irina Agarkova
Hans Gmuender
Stefano Gotta
Ugis Sarkans
Ralf Herwig
Adrian Roth
Johannes Schuchhardt
Henrik Cordes
Patrick Guye
Bernd Timmermann
Steven A. Niederer
Jos C. S. Kleinjans
Marcha Verheijen
Jasmine Minguet
Sally J. Deeb
Carla Pluess
Vanessa Baier
Matthias Lienhard
Ivo Bachmann
Jort J. Merken
Alexandra Zerck
Stefan Boerno
Ramona Nudischer
Anne Hersey
Christoph Thiel
Francis Atkinson
Olivia Clayton
Laura Kunz
Lars Kuepfer
Fiona M. I. Hunter
Christopher F. Bauer
Stephane Heymans
Yannick Schrooders
Gal Barel
Nathalie Selevsek
Alex Lewalle
Ralph Schlapbach
Nicolas Bosc
Florian Caiment
Timo Wittenberger
Ines Smit
Bernardo Lino de Oliveira
Toxicogenomics
RS: GROW - R1 - Prevention
RS: Carim - H02 Cardiomyopathy
Cardiologie
RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Cardiologie (9)
Source :
Communications Biology, Communications Biology, 3(1):573. Nature Publishing Group, Communications biology 3, 573 (2020). doi:10.1038/s42003-020-01302-8, Communications Biology, Vol 3, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2020.

Abstract

Uncovering cellular responses from heterogeneous genomic data is crucial for molecular medicine in particular for drug safety. This can be realized by integrating the molecular activities in networks of interacting proteins. As proof-of-concept we challenge network modeling with time-resolved proteome, transcriptome and methylome measurements in iPSC-derived human 3D cardiac microtissues to elucidate adverse mechanisms of anthracycline cardiotoxicity measured with four different drugs (doxorubicin, epirubicin, idarubicin and daunorubicin). Dynamic molecular analysis at in vivo drug exposure levels reveal a network of 175 disease-associated proteins and identify common modules of anthracycline cardiotoxicity in vitro, related to mitochondrial and sarcomere function as well as remodeling of extracellular matrix. These in vitro-identified modules are transferable and are evaluated with biopsies of cardiomyopathy patients. This to our knowledge most comprehensive study on anthracycline cardiotoxicity demonstrates a reproducible workflow for molecular medicine and serves as a template for detecting adverse drug responses from complex omics data.<br />Using a network propagation approach with integrated multi-omic data, Selevsek et al. develop a reproducible workflow for identifying drug toxicity effects in cellular systems. This is demonstrated with the analysis of anthracycline cardiotoxicity in cardiac microtissues under the effect of multiple drugs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23993642
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Communications Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....813f559344f81693cd246f68ab1aa3b4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01302-8