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1.
Alzheimers Dement (N Y) ; 4: 234-242, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29955666

RESUMEN

Digital technology is transforming the development of drugs for Alzheimer's disease and was the topic of the Alzheimer's Association's Research Roundtable on its May 23-24, 2017 meeting. Research indicates that wearable devices and unobtrusive passive sensors that enable the collection of frequent or continuous, objective, and multidimensional data during daily activities may capture subtle changes in cognition and functional capacity long before the onset of dementia. The potential to exploit these technologies to improve clinical trials as both recruitment and retention tools as well as for potential end points was discussed. The implications for the collection and use of large amounts of data, lessons learned from other related disease areas, ethical concerns raised by these new technologies, and regulatory issues were also covered in the meeting. Finally, the challenges and opportunities of these new technologies for future use were discussed.

2.
J Mol Cell Cardiol ; 94: 162-175, 2016 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27085901

RESUMEN

Alterations in energetic state of the myocardium are associated with decompensated heart failure in humans and in animal models. However, the functional consequences of the observed changes in energetic state on mechanical function are not known. The primary aim of the study was to quantify mechanical/energetic coupling in the heart and to determine if energetic dysfunction can contribute to mechanical failure. A secondary aim was to apply a quantitative systems pharmacology analysis to investigate the effects of drugs that target cross-bridge cycling kinetics in heart failure-associated energetic dysfunction. Herein, a model of metabolite- and calcium-dependent myocardial mechanics was developed from calcium concentration and tension time courses in rat cardiac muscle obtained at different lengths and stimulation frequencies. The muscle dynamics model accounting for the effect of metabolites was integrated into a model of the cardiac ventricles to simulate pressure-volume dynamics in the heart. This cardiac model was integrated into a simple model of the circulation to investigate the effects of metabolic state on whole-body function. Simulations predict that reductions in metabolite pools observed in canine models of heart failure can cause systolic dysfunction, blood volume expansion, venous congestion, and ventricular dilation. Simulations also predict that myosin-activating drugs may partially counteract the effects of energetic state on cross-bridge mechanics in heart failure while increasing myocardial oxygen consumption. Our model analysis demonstrates how metabolic changes observed in heart failure are alone sufficient to cause systolic dysfunction and whole-body heart failure symptoms.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomegalia/metabolismo , Cardiomegalia/fisiopatología , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/metabolismo , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/fisiopatología , Modelos Biológicos , Adenosina Trifosfato/metabolismo , Algoritmos , Cardiomegalia/tratamiento farmacológico , Cardiomegalia/patología , Simulación por Computador , Metabolismo Energético/efectos de los fármacos , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/tratamiento farmacológico , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/patología , Pruebas de Función Cardíaca , Humanos , Hidrólisis , Miofibrillas/metabolismo , Tamaño de los Órganos , Fenotipo , Disfunción Ventricular/tratamiento farmacológico
3.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol ; 14(4): 829-49, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25567753

RESUMEN

Modeling of the heart ventricles is one of the most challenging tasks in soft tissue mechanics because cardiac tissue is a strongly anisotropic incompressible material with an active component of stress. In most current approaches with active force, the number of degrees of freedom (DOF) is limited by the direct method of solution of linear systems of equations. We develop a new approach for high-resolution heart models with large numbers of DOF by: (1) developing a hex-dominant finite element mixed formulation and (2) developing a Krylov subspace iterative method that is able to solve the system of linearized equations for saddle-point problems with active stress. In our approach, passive cardiac tissue is modeled as a hyperelastic, incompressible material with orthotropic properties, and mixed pressure-displacement finite elements are used to enforce incompressibility. Active stress is generated by a model with force dependence on length and velocity of muscle shortening. The ventricles are coupled to a lumped circulatory model. For efficient solution of linear systems, we use Flexible GMRES with a nonlinear preconditioner based on block matrix decomposition involving the Schur complement. Three methods for approximating the inverse of the Schur complement are evaluated: inverse of the pressure mass matrix; least squares commutators; and sparse approximate inverse. The sub-matrix corresponding to the displacement variables is preconditioned by a V-cycle of hybrid geometric-algebraic multigrid followed by correction with several iterations of GMRES preconditioned by sparse approximate inverse. The overall solver is demonstrated on a high-resolution two ventricle mesh based on a human anatomy with roughly 130 K elements and 1.7 M displacement DOF. Effectiveness of the numerical method for active contraction is shown. To the best of our knowledge, this solver is the first to efficiently model ventricular contraction using an iterative linear solver for the mesh size demonstrated and therefore opens the possibility for future very high-resolution models. In addition, several relatively simple benchmark problems are designed for a verification exercise to show that the solver is functioning properly and correctly solves the underlying mathematical model. Here, the output of the newly designed solver is compared to that of the mechanics component of Chaste ('Cancer, Heart and Soft Tissue Environment'). These benchmark tests may be used by other researchers to verify their newly developed methods and codes.


Asunto(s)
Simulación por Computador , Corazón/fisiopatología , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Estrés Mecánico , Análisis de Elementos Finitos , Ventrículos Cardíacos , Humanos , Contracción Miocárdica/fisiología , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
4.
Proc Math Phys Eng Sci ; 471(2184): 20150641, 2015 Dec 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26807042

RESUMEN

Models of cardiac mechanics are increasingly used to investigate cardiac physiology. These models are characterized by a high level of complexity, including the particular anisotropic material properties of biological tissue and the actively contracting material. A large number of independent simulation codes have been developed, but a consistent way of verifying the accuracy and replicability of simulations is lacking. To aid in the verification of current and future cardiac mechanics solvers, this study provides three benchmark problems for cardiac mechanics. These benchmark problems test the ability to accurately simulate pressure-type forces that depend on the deformed objects geometry, anisotropic and spatially varying material properties similar to those seen in the left ventricle and active contractile forces. The benchmark was solved by 11 different groups to generate consensus solutions, with typical differences in higher-resolution solutions at approximately 0.5%, and consistent results between linear, quadratic and cubic finite elements as well as different approaches to simulating incompressible materials. Online tools and solutions are made available to allow these tests to be effectively used in verification of future cardiac mechanics software.

5.
Bioinformatics ; 31(4): 471-83, 2015 Feb 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25236459

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: Inferring how humans respond to external cues such as drugs, chemicals, viruses or hormones is an essential question in biomedicine. Very often, however, this question cannot be addressed because it is not possible to perform experiments in humans. A reasonable alternative consists of generating responses in animal models and 'translating' those results to humans. The limitations of such translation, however, are far from clear, and systematic assessments of its actual potential are urgently needed. sbv IMPROVER (systems biology verification for Industrial Methodology for PROcess VErification in Research) was designed as a series of challenges to address translatability between humans and rodents. This collaborative crowd-sourcing initiative invited scientists from around the world to apply their own computational methodologies on a multilayer systems biology dataset composed of phosphoproteomics, transcriptomics and cytokine data derived from normal human and rat bronchial epithelial cells exposed in parallel to 52 different stimuli under identical conditions. Our aim was to understand the limits of species-to-species translatability at different levels of biological organization: signaling, transcriptional and release of secreted factors (such as cytokines). Participating teams submitted 49 different solutions across the sub-challenges, two-thirds of which were statistically significantly better than random. Additionally, similar computational methods were found to range widely in their performance within the same challenge, and no single method emerged as a clear winner across all sub-challenges. Finally, computational methods were able to effectively translate some specific stimuli and biological processes in the lung epithelial system, such as DNA synthesis, cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix, translation, immune/inflammation and growth factor/proliferation pathways, better than the expected response similarity between species. CONTACT: pmeyerr@us.ibm.com or Julia.Hoeng@pmi.com SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Citocinas/metabolismo , Perfilación de la Expresión Génica , Modelos Animales , Fosfoproteínas/metabolismo , Programas Informáticos , Biología de Sistemas/métodos , Animales , Bronquios/citología , Bronquios/metabolismo , Células Cultivadas , Bases de Datos Factuales , Células Epiteliales/citología , Células Epiteliales/metabolismo , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Humanos , Análisis de Secuencia por Matrices de Oligonucleótidos , Fosforilación , Ratas , Especificidad de la Especie , Investigación Biomédica Traslacional
6.
J Mol Cell Cardiol ; 79: 203-11, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25479336

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The most common inherited cardiac arrhythmia, LQT1, is due to IKs potassium channel mutations and is linked to high risk of adrenergic-triggered cardiac events. We recently showed that although exercise-triggered events are very well treated by ß-blockers for these patients, acute arousal-triggered event rate were not significantly reduced after beta-blocker treatment, suggesting that the mechanisms underlying arousal-triggered arrhythmias may be different from those during exercise. IKs is strongly regulated by ß-adrenergic receptor (ß-AR) signaling, but little is known about the role of α1-AR-mediated regulation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Here we show, using a combination of cellular electrophysiology and computational modeling, that IKs phosphorylation and α1-AR regulation via activation of calcium-dependent PKC isoforms (cPKC) may be a key mechanism to control channel voltage-dependent activation and consequently action potential duration (APD) in response to adrenergic-stimulus. We show that simulated mutation-specific combined adrenergic effects (ß+α) on APD were strongly correlated to acute stress-triggered cardiac event rate for patients while ß-AR effects alone were not. CONCLUSION: We were able to show that calcium-dependent PKC signaling is key to normal QT shortening during acute arousal and when impaired, correlates with increased rate of sudden arousal-triggered cardiac events. Our study suggests that the acute α1-AR-cPKC regulation of IKs is important for QT shortening in "fight-or-flight" response and is linked to decreased risk of sudden emotion/arousal-triggered cardiac events in LQT1 patients.


Asunto(s)
Nivel de Alerta , Calcio/metabolismo , Emociones , Activación del Canal Iónico , Canal de Potasio KCNQ1/metabolismo , Síndrome de QT Prolongado/fisiopatología , Canales de Potasio con Entrada de Voltaje/metabolismo , Proteína Quinasa C/metabolismo , Potenciales de Acción , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Isoenzimas/metabolismo , Canal de Potasio KCNQ1/genética , Síndrome de QT Prolongado/genética , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Mutación/genética , Fosforilación , Canales de Potasio con Entrada de Voltaje/genética , Modelos de Riesgos Proporcionales , Receptores Adrenérgicos alfa/metabolismo , Receptores Adrenérgicos beta/metabolismo , Factores de Riesgo , Transducción de Señal
7.
Bioinformatics ; 28(9): 1193-201, 2012 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22423044

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: Analyses and algorithmic predictions based on high-throughput data are essential for the success of systems biology in academic and industrial settings. Organizations, such as companies and academic consortia, conduct large multi-year scientific studies that entail the collection and analysis of thousands of individual experiments, often over many physical sites and with internal and outsourced components. To extract maximum value, the interested parties need to verify the accuracy and reproducibility of data and methods before the initiation of such large multi-year studies. However, systematic and well-established verification procedures do not exist for automated collection and analysis workflows in systems biology which could lead to inaccurate conclusions. RESULTS: We present here, a review of the current state of systems biology verification and a detailed methodology to address its shortcomings. This methodology named 'Industrial Methodology for Process Verification in Research' or IMPROVER, consists on evaluating a research program by dividing a workflow into smaller building blocks that are individually verified. The verification of each building block can be done internally by members of the research program or externally by 'crowd-sourcing' to an interested community. www.sbvimprover.com IMPLEMENTATION: This methodology could become the preferred choice to verify systems biology research workflows that are becoming increasingly complex and sophisticated in industrial and academic settings.


Asunto(s)
Biología de Sistemas/métodos , Flujo de Trabajo , Revisión por Pares , Publicaciones Periódicas como Asunto , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
9.
Cancer Res ; 67(6): 2757-65, 2007 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17363597

RESUMEN

Oscillations of both p53 and MDM2 proteins have been observed in cells after exposure to stress. A mathematical model describing these oscillations predicted that oscillations occur only at selected levels of p53 and MDM2 proteins. This model prediction suggests that oscillations will disappear in cells containing high levels of MDM2 as observed with a single nucleotide polymorphism in the MDM2 gene (SNP309). The effect of SNP309 upon the p53-MDM2 oscillation was examined in various human cell lines and the oscillations were observed in the cells with at least one wild-type allele for SNP309 (T/T or T/G) but not in cells homozygous for SNP309 (G/G). Furthermore, estrogen preferentially stimulated the transcription of MDM2 from SNP309 G allele and increased the levels of MDM2 protein in estrogen-responsive cells homozygous for SNP309 (G/G). These results suggest the possibility that SNP309 G allele may contribute to gender-specific tumorigenesis through further elevating the MDM2 levels and disrupting the p53-MDM2 oscillation. Furthermore, using the H1299-HW24 cells expressing wild-type p53 under a tetracycline-regulated promoter, the p53-MDM2 oscillation was observed only when p53 levels were in a specific range, and DNA damage was found to be necessary for triggering the p53-MDM2 oscillation. This study shows that higher levels of MDM2 in cells homozygous for SNP309 (G/G) do not permit coordinated p53-MDM2 oscillation after stress, which might contribute to decreased efficiency of the p53 pathway and correlates with a clinical phenotype (i.e., the development of cancers at earlier age of onset in female).


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Proto-Oncogénicas c-mdm2/genética , Proteínas Proto-Oncogénicas c-mdm2/metabolismo , Proteína p53 Supresora de Tumor/metabolismo , Alelos , Línea Celular Tumoral , Daño del ADN , Estradiol/farmacología , Humanos , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Proteínas Proto-Oncogénicas c-mdm2/biosíntesis , Proteína p53 Supresora de Tumor/biosíntesis , Proteína p53 Supresora de Tumor/genética
10.
Science ; 309(5737): 1078-83, 2005 Aug 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16099987

RESUMEN

We developed a model of 545 components (nodes) and 1259 interactions representing signaling pathways and cellular machines in the hippocampal CA1 neuron. Using graph theory methods, we analyzed ligand-induced signal flow through the system. Specification of input and output nodes allowed us to identify functional modules. Networking resulted in the emergence of regulatory motifs, such as positive and negative feedback and feedforward loops, that process information. Key regulators of plasticity were highly connected nodes required for the formation of regulatory motifs, indicating the potential importance of such motifs in determining cellular choices between homeostasis and plasticity.


Asunto(s)
Hipocampo/citología , Neuronas/fisiología , Transducción de Señal , Algoritmos , Animales , Factor Neurotrófico Derivado del Encéfalo/metabolismo , Proteína Quinasa Tipo 2 Dependiente de Calcio Calmodulina , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de Calcio-Calmodulina/metabolismo , Proteína de Unión a Elemento de Respuesta al AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Retroalimentación Fisiológica , Ácido Glutámico/metabolismo , Hipocampo/fisiología , Homeostasis , Ligandos , Potenciación a Largo Plazo , Mamíferos , Matemática , Proteínas Quinasas Activadas por Mitógenos/metabolismo , Modelos Neurológicos , Plasticidad Neuronal , Norepinefrina/metabolismo , Proteína Quinasa C/metabolismo , Receptores AMPA/metabolismo , Programas Informáticos , Biología de Sistemas
12.
Bioinformatics ; 20(7): 1033-44, 2004 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14764572

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: Despite the growing literature devoted to finding differentially expressed genes in assays probing different tissues types, little attention has been paid to the combinatorial nature of feature selection inherent to large, high-dimensional gene expression datasets. New flexible data analysis approaches capable of searching relevant subgroups of genes and experiments are needed to understand multivariate associations of gene expression patterns with observed phenotypes. RESULTS: We present in detail a deterministic algorithm to discover patterns of multivariate gene associations in gene expression data. The patterns discovered are differential with respect to a control dataset. The algorithm is exhaustive and efficient, reporting all existent patterns that fit a given input parameter set while avoiding enumeration of the entire pattern space. The value of the pattern discovery approach is demonstrated by finding a set of genes that differentiate between two types of lymphoma. Moreover, these genes are found to behave consistently in an independent dataset produced in a different laboratory using different arrays, thus validating the genes selected using our algorithm. We show that the genes deemed significant in terms of their multivariate statistics will be missed using other methods. AVAILABILITY: Our set of pattern discovery algorithms including a user interface is distributed as a package called Genes@Work. This package is freely available to non-commercial users and can be downloaded from our website (http://www.research.ibm.com/FunGen).


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Perfilación de la Expresión Génica/métodos , Alineación de Secuencia/métodos , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN/métodos , Humanos , Linfoma/genética , Análisis Multivariante , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Homología de Secuencia de Ácido Nucleico , Programas Informáticos
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