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1.
Anal Chem ; 96(12): 4745-4755, 2024 03 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38417094

RESUMO

Despite the well-established connection between systematic metabolic abnormalities and the pathophysiology of pituitary adenoma (PA), current metabolomic studies have reported an extremely limited number of metabolites associated with PA. Moreover, there was very little consistency in the identified metabolite signatures, resulting in a lack of robust metabolic biomarkers for the diagnosis and treatment of PA. Herein, we performed a global untargeted plasma metabolomic profiling on PA and identified a highly robust metabolomic signature based on a strategy. Specifically, this strategy is unique in (1) integrating repeated random sampling and a consensus evaluation-based feature selection algorithm and (2) evaluating the consistency of metabolomic signatures among different sample groups. This strategy demonstrated superior robustness and stronger discriminative ability compared with that of other feature selection methods including Student's t-test, partial least-squares-discriminant analysis, support vector machine recursive feature elimination, and random forest recursive feature elimination. More importantly, a highly robust metabolomic signature comprising 45 PA-specific differential metabolites was identified. Moreover, metabolite set enrichment analysis of these potential metabolic biomarkers revealed altered lipid metabolism in PA. In conclusion, our findings contribute to a better understanding of the metabolic changes in PA and may have implications for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic approaches targeting lipid metabolism in PA. We believe that the proposed strategy serves as a valuable tool for screening robust, discriminating metabolic features in the field of metabolomics.


Assuntos
Metabolismo dos Lipídeos , Neoplasias Hipofisárias , Humanos , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/diagnóstico , Metabolômica/métodos , Análise Discriminante , Biomarcadores
2.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 52(D1): D1450-D1464, 2024 Jan 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37850638

RESUMO

Distinct from the traditional diagnostic/prognostic biomarker (adopted as the indicator of disease state/process), the therapeutic biomarker (ThMAR) has emerged to be very crucial in the clinical development and clinical practice of all therapies. There are five types of ThMAR that have been found to play indispensable roles in various stages of drug discovery, such as: Pharmacodynamic Biomarker essential for guaranteeing the pharmacological effects of a therapy, Safety Biomarker critical for assessing the extent or likelihood of therapy-induced toxicity, Monitoring Biomarker indispensable for guiding clinical management by serially measuring patients' status, Predictive Biomarker crucial for maximizing the clinical outcome of a therapy for specific individuals, and Surrogate Endpoint fundamental for accelerating the approval of a therapy. However, these data of ThMARs has not been comprehensively described by any of the existing databases. Herein, a database, named 'TheMarker', was therefore constructed to (a) systematically offer all five types of ThMAR used at different stages of drug development, (b) comprehensively describe ThMAR information for the largest number of drugs among available databases, (c) extensively cover the widest disease classes by not just focusing on anticancer therapies. These data in TheMarker are expected to have great implication and significant impact on drug discovery and clinical practice, and it is freely accessible without any login requirement at: https://idrblab.org/themarker.


Assuntos
Biomarcadores , Bases de Dados Factuais , Humanos , Descoberta de Drogas , Terapêutica , Prognóstico , Doença
3.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38090819

RESUMO

A thorough understanding of cell-line drug response mechanisms is crucial for drug development, repurposing, and resistance reversal. While targeted anticancer therapies have shown promise, not all cancers have well-established biomarkers to stratify drug response. Single-gene associations only explain a small fraction of the observed drug sensitivity, so a more comprehensive method is needed. However, while deep learning models have shown promise in predicting drug response in cell lines, they still face significant challenges when it comes to their application in clinical applications. Therefore, this study proposed a new strategy called DD-Response for cell-line drug response prediction. First, a limitation of narrow modeling horizons was overcome to expand the model training domain by integrating multiple datasets through source-specific label binarization. Second, a modified representation based on a two-dimensional structurized gridding map (SGM) was developed for cell lines & drugs, avoiding feature correlation neglect and potential information loss. Third, a dual-branch, multi-channel convolutional neural network-based model for pairwise response prediction was constructed, enabling accurate outcomes and improved exploration of underlying mechanisms. As a result, the DD-Response demonstrated superior performance, captured cell-line characteristic variations, and provided insights into key factors impacting cell-line drug response. In addition, DD-Response exhibited scalability in predicting clinical patient responses to drug therapy. Overall, because of DD-response's excellent ability to predict drug response and capture key molecules behind them, DD-response is expected to greatly facilitate drug discovery, repurposing, resistance reversal, and therapeutic optimization.

4.
Brief Bioinform ; 24(1)2023 01 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36631399

RESUMO

Due to its promising capacity in improving drug efficacy, polypharmacology has emerged to be a new theme in the drug discovery of complex disease. In the process of novel multi-target drugs (MTDs) discovery, in silico strategies come to be quite essential for the advantage of high throughput and low cost. However, current researchers mostly aim at typical closely related target pairs. Because of the intricate pathogenesis networks of complex diseases, many distantly related targets are found to play crucial role in synergistic treatment. Therefore, an innovational method to develop drugs which could simultaneously target distantly related target pairs is of utmost importance. At the same time, reducing the false discovery rate in the design of MTDs remains to be the daunting technological difficulty. In this research, effective small molecule clustering in the positive dataset, together with a putative negative dataset generation strategy, was adopted in the process of model constructions. Through comprehensive assessment on 10 target pairs with hierarchical similarity-levels, the proposed strategy turned out to reduce the false discovery rate successfully. Constructed model types with much smaller numbers of inhibitor molecules gained considerable yields and showed better false-hit controllability than before. To further evaluate the generalization ability, an in-depth assessment of high-throughput virtual screening on ChEMBL database was conducted. As a result, this novel strategy could hierarchically improve the enrichment factors for each target pair (especially for those distantly related/unrelated target pairs), corresponding to target pair similarity-levels.


Assuntos
Descoberta de Drogas , Polifarmacologia , Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala
5.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 51(D1): D1263-D1275, 2023 01 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36243960

RESUMO

Widespread drug resistance has become the key issue in global healthcare. Extensive efforts have been made to reveal not only diverse diseases experiencing drug resistance, but also the six distinct types of molecular mechanisms underlying this resistance. A database that describes a comprehensive list of diseases with drug resistance (not just cancers/infections) and all types of resistance mechanisms is now urgently needed. However, no such database has been available to date. In this study, a comprehensive database describing drug resistance information named 'DRESIS' was therefore developed. It was introduced to (i) systematically provide, for the first time, all existing types of molecular mechanisms underlying drug resistance, (ii) extensively cover the widest range of diseases among all existing databases and (iii) explicitly describe the clinically/experimentally verified resistance data for the largest number of drugs. Since drug resistance has become an ever-increasing clinical issue, DRESIS is expected to have great implications for future new drug discovery and clinical treatment optimization. It is now publicly accessible without any login requirement at: https://idrblab.org/dresis/.


Assuntos
Descoberta de Drogas , Bases de Dados Factuais , Resistência a Medicamentos
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