4.7 Article

Literature-based predictions of Mendelian disease therapies

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 110, Issue 10, Pages 1661-1672

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.08.018

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Correcting the underlying molecular imbalance may be more effective than symptomatic treatment for Mendelian disorders. PARMESAN is a computational tool that searches PubMed and PubMed Central to assemble drug-gene and gene-gene relationships into a central knowledge base. It predicts novel drug-gene relationships and assigns evidence-based scores to each prediction.
In the effort to treat Mendelian disorders, correcting the underlying molecular imbalance may be more effective than symptomatic treatment. Identifying treatments that might accomplish this goal requires extensive and up-to-date knowledge of molecular pathways- including drug-gene and gene-gene relationships. To address this challenge, we present parsing modifiers via article annotations(PARMESAN), a computational tool that searches PubMed and PubMed Central for information to assemble these relationships into a central knowledge base. PARMESAN then predicts putatively novel drug-gene relationships, assigning an evidence-based score to each prediction. We compare PARMESAN's drug-gene predictions to all of the drug-gene relationships displayed by the Drug-Gene Interaction Database (DGIdb) and show that higher-scoring relationship predictions are more likely to match the directionality (up-versus down-regulation) indicated by this database. PARMESAN had more than 200,000 drug predictions scoring above 8 (as one example cutoff), for more than 3,700 genes. Among these predicted relationships, 210 were registered in DGIdb and 201 (96%) had matching directionality. This publicly available tool provides an automated way to prioritize drug screens to target the most-promising drugs to test, thereby saving time and resources in the development of therapeutics for genetic disorders.

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