4.6 Article

An ensemble learning approach for modeling the systems biology of drug-induced injury

Journal

BIOLOGY DIRECT
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13062-020-00288-x

Keywords

CAMDA; Drug-induced liver injury; Hepatotoxicity; Drug safety; Systems biology; Machine learning; Cmap; Drug structure

Categories

Funding

  1. Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking [116030, 777365]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
  3. Spanish Ministry of Economy (MINECO) [BIO2017-85329-R, RYC-2015-17519]
  4. EU H2020 Programme 2014-2020 [676559]
  5. Agencia de Gestio D'ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca Generalitat de Catalunya (AGAUR) [2017SGR01020]
  6. ISCIII-FEDER [CPII16/00026]
  7. PE I + D + i 2013-2016 - ISCIII [PT13/0001/0023]
  8. FEDER
  9. MINECO [MDM-2014-0370]
  10. CAMDA Travel Fellowship
  11. EFPIA companies

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This study developed an ensemble learning approach using various features to predict drugs that may cause DILI. Results showed that using different features individually had limitations, but combining them improved the robustness of the model. Overall, drug-target associations as a feature yielded the best accuracy in predicting DILI.
Background Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is an adverse reaction caused by the intake of drugs of common use that produces liver damage. The impact of DILI is estimated to affect around 20 in 100,000 inhabitants worldwide each year. Despite being one of the main causes of liver failure, the pathophysiology and mechanisms of DILI are poorly understood. In the present study, we developed an ensemble learning approach based on different features (CMap gene expression, chemical structures, drug targets) to predict drugs that might cause DILI and gain a better understanding of the mechanisms linked to the adverse reaction. Results We searched for gene signatures in CMap gene expression data by using two approaches: phenotype-gene associations data from DisGeNET, and a non-parametric test comparing gene expression of DILI-Concern and No-DILI-Concern drugs (as per DILIrank definitions). The average accuracy of the classifiers in both approaches was 69%. We used chemical structures as features, obtaining an accuracy of 65%. The combination of both types of features produced an accuracy around 63%, but improved the independent hold-out test up to 67%. The use of drug-target associations as feature obtained the best accuracy (70%) in the independent hold-out test. Conclusions When using CMap gene expression data, searching for a specific gene signature among the landmark genes improves the quality of the classifiers, but it is still limited by the intrinsic noise of the dataset. When using chemical structures as a feature, the structural diversity of the known DILI-causing drugs hampers the prediction, which is a similar problem as for the use of gene expression information. The combination of both features did not improve the quality of the classifiers but increased the robustness as shown on independent hold-out tests. The use of drug-target associations as feature improved the prediction, specially the specificity, and the results were comparable to previous research studies.

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