Title Genome scale metabolic models as tools for drug design and personalized medicine /
Authors Raškevičius, Vytautas ; Mikalayeva, Valeryia ; Antanavičiūtė, Ieva ; Ceslevičienė, Ieva ; Skeberdis, Vytenis Arvydas ; Kairys, Visvaldas ; Bordel Velasco, Sergio
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0190636
Full Text Download
Is Part of PLoS One.. San Francisco : Public Library of Science. 2018, vol. 13, no. 1, art. no. 0190636, p. [1-14].. eISSN 1932-6203
Keywords [eng] Drug design ; Models, biological ; Metabolic networks and pathways ; Precision medicine
Abstract [eng] In this work we aim to show how Genome Scale Metabolic Models (GSMMs) can be used as tools for drug design. By comparing the chemical structures of human metabolites (obtained using their KEGG indexes) and the compounds contained in the DrugBank database, we have observed that compounds showing Tanimoto scores higher than 0.9 with a metabolite, are 29.5 times more likely to bind the enzymes metabolizing the considered metabolite, than ligands chosen randomly. By using RNA-seq data to constrain a human GSMM it is possible to obtain an estimation of its distribution of metabolic fluxes and to quantify the effects of restraining the rate of chosen metabolic reactions (for example using a drug that inhibits the enzymes catalyzing the mentioned reactions). This method allowed us to predict the differential effects of lipoamide analogs on the proliferation of MCF7 (a breast cancer cell line) and ASM (airway smooth muscle) cells respectively. These differential effects were confirmed experimentally, which provides a proof of concept of how human GSMMs could be used to find therapeutic windows against cancer. By using RNA-seq data of 34 different cancer cell lines and 26 healthy tissues, we assessed the putative anticancer effects of the compounds in DrugBank which are structurally similar to human metabolites. Among other results it was predicted that the mevalonate pathway might constitute a good therapeutic window against cancer proliferation, due to the fact that most cancer cell lines do not express the cholesterol transporter NPC1L1 and the lipoprotein lipase LPL, which makes them rely on the mevalonate pathway to obtain cholesterol.
Published San Francisco : Public Library of Science
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2018