Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy

In recent years, there has been a gradual paradigm shift in the drug industry towards combination therapy after the “one-target one-drug” (mono-therapy) approach fails to increase the number of successful drugs. Although, the use of multiple drugs in a therapy is potentially useful for addressing di...

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Main Author: Chua, Huey Eng
Other Authors: Sourav Saha Bhowmick
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64995
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-64995
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering
Chua, Huey Eng
Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
description In recent years, there has been a gradual paradigm shift in the drug industry towards combination therapy after the “one-target one-drug” (mono-therapy) approach fails to increase the number of successful drugs. Although, the use of multiple drugs in a therapy is potentially useful for addressing diseases (e.g., cancer) that implicate multiple genes and pathways, there is also a higher possibility of drug toxicity that is caused by various factors including the com-pounding of off-target effects of individual drugs. Careful selection of target combination is an important step towards reducing attrition rate of new drug combinations during preclinical and clinical phases. Although various techniques have been suggested for target selection, they generally apply to mono-therapies. Many of these approaches (e.g., affinity matrix) cannot be applied directly to target combination identification because they lack consideration of inter-action between targets that affects efficacy and toxicity profiles of drug combinations hitting these targets. In addition, the few proposed approach for target combination identification all suffer from certain key limitations. First, they assume that all targets are equally probable for a combination. However, targets influence effects of the combinations differently and appropriate choice of targets can potentially improve the target combinations. Second, they demand specific technical expertise from users (e.g., knowledge of what off-target effects to optimize) and a lack of the required expertise can undermine the effectiveness of the method. In this dissertation, we seek to address these limitations by proposing a framework called TRECENTO (In Silico NeTwork-dRiven IdEntifiCation of TargEt CombiNaTions for COmbination Therapy). TRECENTO uses a network-based approach for identifying target combinations in signaling networks. In particular, it addresses three aspects of target combination identification, namely, target characterization, target prioritization and synergistic target combination identification. For target characterization, we propose TENET, a support vector machine-based approach, to characterize known targets in signaling networks using network topological features. The insights gained from characterizing the targets are used subsequently for target prioritization in our proposed network-based approach, TAPESTRY. Finally, for synergistic target combination identification, we propose a heuristics-based simulated annealing algorithm called STEROID. Specifically, STEROID uses heuristics based on target prioritization and the Loewe additivity theorem to identify synergistic target combinations that are optimized for off-target effects. We evaluated TRECENTO on five signaling networks that are implicated in diseases (e.g., cancer) or specific biological processes (e.g., glucose metabolism). Our experimental results reveal several key findings. First, known targets in different signaling networks are characterized by different sets of topological features. This is different from the observation reported by Hwang and colleagues for several protein-protein interaction networks. Second, the use of network dynamic features can improve target prioritization in certain networks. This finding highlights the importance of dynamic features and the need to explore them further in network-based analysis of signaling networks. Third, using appropriate heuristics can im-prove the quality of target combinations identified in terms of off-target effects when compared to state-of-the-art approaches. Note that TRECENTO optimizes off-target effects of the entire system instead of specific off-target effects. In summary, this thesis is an important first step towards improving the quality of target combination selection, a key step in enabling target combination therapies.
author2 Sourav Saha Bhowmick
author_facet Sourav Saha Bhowmick
Chua, Huey Eng
format Theses and Dissertations
author Chua, Huey Eng
author_sort Chua, Huey Eng
title Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
title_short Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
title_full Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
title_fullStr Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
title_full_unstemmed Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
title_sort trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64995
_version_ 1759855346207162368
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-649952023-03-04T00:42:46Z Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy Chua, Huey Eng Sourav Saha Bhowmick School of Computer Engineering Singapore-MIT Alliance Programme DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering In recent years, there has been a gradual paradigm shift in the drug industry towards combination therapy after the “one-target one-drug” (mono-therapy) approach fails to increase the number of successful drugs. Although, the use of multiple drugs in a therapy is potentially useful for addressing diseases (e.g., cancer) that implicate multiple genes and pathways, there is also a higher possibility of drug toxicity that is caused by various factors including the com-pounding of off-target effects of individual drugs. Careful selection of target combination is an important step towards reducing attrition rate of new drug combinations during preclinical and clinical phases. Although various techniques have been suggested for target selection, they generally apply to mono-therapies. Many of these approaches (e.g., affinity matrix) cannot be applied directly to target combination identification because they lack consideration of inter-action between targets that affects efficacy and toxicity profiles of drug combinations hitting these targets. In addition, the few proposed approach for target combination identification all suffer from certain key limitations. First, they assume that all targets are equally probable for a combination. However, targets influence effects of the combinations differently and appropriate choice of targets can potentially improve the target combinations. Second, they demand specific technical expertise from users (e.g., knowledge of what off-target effects to optimize) and a lack of the required expertise can undermine the effectiveness of the method. In this dissertation, we seek to address these limitations by proposing a framework called TRECENTO (In Silico NeTwork-dRiven IdEntifiCation of TargEt CombiNaTions for COmbination Therapy). TRECENTO uses a network-based approach for identifying target combinations in signaling networks. In particular, it addresses three aspects of target combination identification, namely, target characterization, target prioritization and synergistic target combination identification. For target characterization, we propose TENET, a support vector machine-based approach, to characterize known targets in signaling networks using network topological features. The insights gained from characterizing the targets are used subsequently for target prioritization in our proposed network-based approach, TAPESTRY. Finally, for synergistic target combination identification, we propose a heuristics-based simulated annealing algorithm called STEROID. Specifically, STEROID uses heuristics based on target prioritization and the Loewe additivity theorem to identify synergistic target combinations that are optimized for off-target effects. We evaluated TRECENTO on five signaling networks that are implicated in diseases (e.g., cancer) or specific biological processes (e.g., glucose metabolism). Our experimental results reveal several key findings. First, known targets in different signaling networks are characterized by different sets of topological features. This is different from the observation reported by Hwang and colleagues for several protein-protein interaction networks. Second, the use of network dynamic features can improve target prioritization in certain networks. This finding highlights the importance of dynamic features and the need to explore them further in network-based analysis of signaling networks. Third, using appropriate heuristics can im-prove the quality of target combinations identified in terms of off-target effects when compared to state-of-the-art approaches. Note that TRECENTO optimizes off-target effects of the entire system instead of specific off-target effects. In summary, this thesis is an important first step towards improving the quality of target combination selection, a key step in enabling target combination therapies. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (SCE) 2015-06-10T03:55:11Z 2015-06-10T03:55:11Z 2015 2015 Thesis Chua, H. E. (2015). Trecento : in silico network-driven identification of target combinations for combination therapy. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/64995 10.32657/10356/64995 en 335 p. application/pdf