4.6 Article

The relative resistance of children to sepsis mortality: from pathways to drug candidates

Journal

MOLECULAR SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/msb.20177998

Keywords

connectivity map; drug discovery; pathways; sepsis

Funding

  1. NIH [ES00002, 5T32HL007118]
  2. DARPA [W911NF-10-1-0217]
  3. CIRCUITS grant from the Cure Alzheimer's Fund
  4. Joseph D. Brain Fellowship Fund
  5. Jere Meade Fellowship Fund
  6. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Sheffield Biomedical Research Centre (Translational Neuroscience)/NIHR Sheffield Clinical Research Facility

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Attempts to develop drugs that address sepsis based on leads developed in animal models have failed. We sought to identify leads based on human data by exploiting a natural experiment: the relative resistance of children to mortality from severe infections and sepsis. Using public datasets, we identified key differences in pathway activity (Pathprint) in blood transcriptome profiles of septic adults and children. To find drugs that could promote beneficial (child) pathways or inhibit harmful (adult) ones, we built an in silico pathway drug network (PDN) using expression correlation between drug, disease, and pathway gene signatures across 58,475 microarrays. Specific pathway clusters from children or adults were assessed for correlation with drug-based signatures. Validation by literature curation and by direct testing in an endotoxemia model of murine sepsis of the most correlated drug candidates demonstrated that the Pathprint-PDN methodology is more effective at generating positive drug leads than gene-level methods (e.g., CMap). Pathway-centric Pathprint-PDN is a powerful new way to identify drug candidates for intervention against sepsis and provides direct insight into pathways that may determine survival.

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