scholarly journals Hepatotoxicity Prediction by Systems Biology Modeling of Disturbed Metabolic Pathways Using Gene Expression Data

Author(s):  
Oriol López-Massaguer ◽  
Manuel Pastor ◽  
Ferran Sanz ◽  
Pablo Carbonell
2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 3137-3148
Author(s):  
Nazanin Hosseinkhan ◽  
Peyman Zarrineh ◽  
Hassan Rokni-Zadeh ◽  
Mohammad Reza Ashouri ◽  
Ali Masoudi-Nejad

Gene co-expression analysis is one of the main aspects of systems biology that uses high-throughput gene expression data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengnan Xu ◽  
Kathryn Ware ◽  
Yuantong Ding ◽  
So Kim ◽  
Maya Sheth ◽  
...  

The evolution of therapeutic resistance is a major cause of death for cancer patients. The development of therapy resistance is shaped by the ecological dynamics within the tumor microenvironment and the selective pressure of the host immune system. These selective forces often lead to evolutionary convergence on pathways or hallmarks that drive progression. Thus, a deeper understanding of the evolutionary convergences that occur could reveal vulnerabilities to treat therapy-resistant cancer. To this end, we combined phylogenetic clustering, systems biology analyses, and molecular experimentation to identify convergences in gene expression data onto common signaling pathways. We applied these methods to derive new insights about the networks at play during transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β)-mediated epithelial–mesenchymal transition in lung cancer. Phylogenetic analyses of gene expression data from TGF-β-treated cells revealed convergence of cells toward amine metabolic pathways and autophagy during TGF-β treatment. Knockdown of the autophagy regulatory, ATG16L1, re-sensitized lung cancer cells to cancer therapies following TGF-β-induced resistance, implicating autophagy as a TGF-β-mediated chemoresistance mechanism. In addition, high ATG16L expression was found to be a poor prognostic marker in multiple cancer types. These analyses reveal the usefulness of combining evolutionary and systems biology methods with experimental validation to illuminate new therapeutic vulnerabilities for cancer.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xanthoula Atsalaki ◽  
Lefteris Koumakis ◽  
George Potamias ◽  
Manolis Tsiknakis

AbstractHigh-throughput technologies, such as chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) with massively parallel sequencing (ChIP-seq) have enabled cost and time efficient generation of immense amount of genome data. The advent of advanced sequencing techniques allowed biologists and bioinformaticians to investigate biological aspects of cell function and understand or reveal unexplored disease etiologies. Systems biology attempts to formulate the molecular mechanisms in mathematical models and one of the most important areas is the gene regulatory networks (GRNs), a collection of DNA segments that somehow interact with each other. GRNs incorporate valuable information about molecular targets that can be corellated to specific phenotype.In our study we highlight the need to develop new explorative tools and approaches for the integration of different types of -omics data such as ChIP-seq and GRNs using pathway analysis methodologies. We present an integrative approach for ChIP-seq and gene expression data on GRNs. Using public microarray expression samples for lung cancer and healthy subjects along with the KEGG human gene regulatory networks, we identified ways to disrupt functional sub-pathways on lung cancer with the aid of CTCF ChIP-seq data, as a proof of concept.We expect that such a systems biology pipeline could assist researchers to identify corellations and causality of transcription factors over functional or disrupted biological sub-pathways.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengnan Xu ◽  
Kathryn E. Ware ◽  
Yuantong Ding ◽  
So Young Kim ◽  
Maya Sheth ◽  
...  

AbstractThe evolution of therapeutic resistance is a major cause of death for patients with solid tumors. The development of therapy resistance is shaped by the ecological dynamics within the tumor microenvironment and the selective pressure induced by the host immune system. These ecological and selective forces often lead to evolutionary convergence on one or more pathways or hallmarks that drive progression. These hallmarks are, in turn, intimately linked to each other through gene expression networks. Thus, a deeper understanding of the evolutionary convergences that occur at the gene expression level could reveal vulnerabilities that could be targeted to treat therapy-resistant cancer. To this end, we used a combination of phylogenetic clustering, systems biology analyses, and wet-bench molecular experimentation to identify convergences in gene expression data onto common signaling pathways. We applied these methods to derive new insights about the networks at play during TGF-β-mediated epithelial-mesenchymal transition in a lung cancer model system. Phylogenetics analyses of gene expression data from TGF-β treated cells revealed evolutionary convergence of cells toward amine-metabolic pathways and autophagy during TGF-β treatment. Using high-throughput drug screens, we found that knockdown of the autophagy regulatory, ATG16L1, re-sensitized lung cancer cells to cancer therapies following TGF-β-induced resistance, implicating autophagy as a TGF-β-mediated chemoresistance mechanism. Analysis of publicly-available clinical data sets validated the adverse prognostic importance of ATG16L expression in multiple cancer types including kidney, lung, and colon cancer patients. These analyses reveal the usefulness of combining evolutionary and systems biology methods with experimental validation to illuminate new therapeutic vulnerabilities.


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