4.7 Article

A Multiscale Simulation System for the Prediction of Drug-Induced Cardiotoxicity

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 483-492

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ci100423z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Commission [DG-INFSO-224381]
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [RD06/0009, RD07/0067]
  3. Innovative Medicines Initiative [115002]
  4. Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica del Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion of Spain [TEC2008-02090]

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The preclinical assessment of drug-induced ventricular arrhythmia, a major concern for regulators, is typically based on experimental or computational models focused on the potassium channel hERG (human ether-a-go-go-related gene, K(v)11.1). Even if the role of this ion channel in the ventricular repolarization is of critical importance, the complexity of the events involved make the cardiac safety assessment based only on hERG has a high risk of producing either false positive or negative results. We introduce a multiscale simulation system aiming to produce a better cardiotoxicity assessment. At the molecular scale, the proposed system uses a combination of docking simulations on two potassium channels, hERG and KCNQ1, plus three-dimensional quantitative structure activity relationship modeling for predicting how the tested compound will block the potassium currents IKr and IKs. The obtained results have been introduced in electrophysiological models of the cardiomyocytes and the ventricular tissue, allowing the direct prediction of the drug effects on electrocardiogram simulations. The usefulness of the whole method is illustrated by predicting the cardiotoxic effect of several compounds, including some examples in which classic hERG-based models produce false positive or negative results, yielding correct predictions for all of them. These results can be considered a proof of concept, suggesting that multiscale prediction systems can be suitable for being used for preliminary screening in lead discovery, before the compound is physically available, or in early preclinical development when they can be fed with experimentally obtained data.

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