Translatable pathways classification (TransPath-C) for inferring processes germane to human biology from animal studies data: example application in neurobiology.

IF 1.5 4区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY Integrative Biology Pub Date : 2021-12-15 DOI:10.1093/intbio/zyab016
Molly J Carroll, Natàlia Garcia-Reyero, Edward J Perkins, Douglas A Lauffenburger
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Abstract

How to translate insights gained from studies in one organismal species for what is most likely to be germane in another species, such as from mice to humans, is a ubiquitous challenge in basic biology as well as biomedicine. This is an especially difficult problem when there are few molecular features that are obviously important in both species for a given phenotype of interest. Neuropathologies are a prominent realm of this complication. Schizophrenia is complex psychiatric disorder that affects 1% of the population. Many genetic factors have been proposed to drive the development of schizophrenia, and the 22q11 microdeletion (MD) syndrome has been shown to dramatically increase this risk. Due to heterogeneity of presentation of symptoms, diagnosis and formulation of treatment options for patients can often be delayed, and there is an urgent need for novel therapeutics directed toward the treatment of schizophrenia. Here, we present a novel computational approach, Translational Pathways Classification (TransPath-C), that can be used to identify shared pathway dysregulation between mouse models and human schizophrenia cohorts. This method uses variation of pathway activation in the mouse model to predict both mouse and human disease phenotype. Analysis of shared dysregulated pathways called out by both the mouse and human classifiers of TransPath-C can identify pathways that can be targeted in both preclinical and human cohorts of schizophrenia. In application to the 22q11 MD mouse model, our findings suggest that PAR1 pathway activation found upregulated in this mouse phenotype is germane for the corresponding human schizophrenia cohort such that inhibition of PAR1 may offer a novel therapeutic target.

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从动物研究数据推断与人类生物学相关的过程的可翻译通路分类(TransPath-C):神经生物学中的示例应用。
如何将从一种生物物种的研究中获得的见解转化为最可能与另一物种相关的东西,比如从老鼠到人类,是基础生物学和生物医学领域普遍存在的挑战。这是一个特别困难的问题,当有很少的分子特征,显然是重要的两个物种对于给定的表型感兴趣。神经病理是该并发症的一个突出领域。精神分裂症是一种复杂的精神疾病,影响了1%的人口。许多遗传因素已被提出驱动精神分裂症的发展,22q11微缺失(MD)综合征已被证明显著增加这种风险。由于症状表现的异质性,患者的诊断和治疗方案的制定往往会延迟,因此迫切需要针对精神分裂症治疗的新疗法。在这里,我们提出了一种新的计算方法,翻译通路分类(TransPath-C),可用于识别小鼠模型和人类精神分裂症队列之间的共享通路失调。该方法利用小鼠模型中通路激活的变化来预测小鼠和人类的疾病表型。对小鼠和人类TransPath-C分类器所指出的共同失调通路进行分析,可以确定临床前和人类精神分裂症患者的靶向通路。在应用于22q11 MD小鼠模型中,我们的研究结果表明,在这种小鼠表型中发现的PAR1通路激活上调与相应的人类精神分裂症群体密切相关,因此抑制PAR1可能提供新的治疗靶点。
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来源期刊
Integrative Biology
Integrative Biology 生物-细胞生物学
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Integrative Biology publishes original biological research based on innovative experimental and theoretical methodologies that answer biological questions. The journal is multi- and inter-disciplinary, calling upon expertise and technologies from the physical sciences, engineering, computation, imaging, and mathematics to address critical questions in biological systems. Research using experimental or computational quantitative technologies to characterise biological systems at the molecular, cellular, tissue and population levels is welcomed. Of particular interest are submissions contributing to quantitative understanding of how component properties at one level in the dimensional scale (nano to micro) determine system behaviour at a higher level of complexity. Studies of synthetic systems, whether used to elucidate fundamental principles of biological function or as the basis for novel applications are also of interest.
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