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Drug-target identification in COVID-19 disease mechanisms using computational systems biology approaches

Authors :
Anna Niarakis
Marek Ostaszewski
Alexander Mazein
Inna Kuperstein
Martina Kutmon
Marc E. Gillespie
Akira Funahashi
Marcio Luis Acencio
Ahmed Hemedan
Michael Aichem
Karsten Klein
Tobias Czauderna
Felicia Burtscher
Takahiro G. Yamada
Yusuke Hiki
Noriko F. Hiroi
Finterly Hu
Nhung Pham
Friederike Ehrhart
Egon L. Willighagen
Alberto Valdeolivas
Aurelien Dugourd
Francesco Messina
Marina Esteban-Medina
Maria Peña-Chilet
Kinza Rian
Sylvain Soliman
Sara Sadat Aghamiri
Bhanwar Lal Puniya
Aurélien Naldi
Tomáš Helikar
Vidisha Singh
Marco Fariñas Fernández
Viviam Bermudez
Eirini Tsirvouli
Arnau Montagud
Vincent Noël
Miguel Ponce-de-Leon
Dieter Maier
Angela Bauch
Benjamin M. Gyori
John A. Bachman
Augustin Luna
Janet Piñero
Laura I. Furlong
Irina Balaur
Adrien Rougny
Yohan Jarosz
Rupert W. Overall
Robert Phair
Livia Perfetto
Lisa Matthews
Devasahayam Arokia Balaya Rex
Marija Orlic-Milacic
Luis Cristobal Monraz Gomez
Bertrand De Meulder
Jean Marie Ravel
Bijay Jassal
Venkata Satagopam
Guanming Wu
Martin Golebiewski
Piotr Gawron
Laurence Calzone
Jacques S. Beckmann
Chris T. Evelo
Peter D’Eustachio
Falk Schreiber
Julio Saez-Rodriguez
Joaquin Dopazo
Martin Kuiper
Alfonso Valencia
Olaf Wolkenhauer
Hiroaki Kitano
Emmanuel Barillot
Charles Auffray
Rudi Balling
Reinhard Schneider
the COVID-19 Disease Map Community
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology, Vol 14 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2024.

Abstract

IntroductionThe COVID-19 Disease Map project is a large-scale community effort uniting 277 scientists from 130 Institutions around the globe. We use high-quality, mechanistic content describing SARS-CoV-2-host interactions and develop interoperable bioinformatic pipelines for novel target identification and drug repurposing. MethodsExtensive community work allowed an impressive step forward in building interfaces between Systems Biology tools and platforms. Our framework can link biomolecules from omics data analysis and computational modelling to dysregulated pathways in a cell-, tissue- or patient-specific manner. Drug repurposing using text mining and AI-assisted analysis identified potential drugs, chemicals and microRNAs that could target the identified key factors.ResultsResults revealed drugs already tested for anti-COVID-19 efficacy, providing a mechanistic context for their mode of action, and drugs already in clinical trials for treating other diseases, never tested against COVID-19. DiscussionThe key advance is that the proposed framework is versatile and expandable, offering a significant upgrade in the arsenal for virus-host interactions and other complex pathologies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16643224
Volume :
14
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.53015acf3143cf9c3f232ae67ad161
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1282859