Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal (Jan 2021)

Drug repositioning based on network-specific core genes identifies potential drugs for the treatment of autism spectrum disorder in children

  • Huan Gao,
  • Yuan Ni,
  • Xueying Mo,
  • Dantong Li,
  • Shan Teng,
  • Qingsheng Huang,
  • Shuai Huang,
  • Guangjian Liu,
  • Sheng Zhang,
  • Yaping Tang,
  • Long Lu,
  • Huiying Liang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 3908 – 3921

Abstract

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Identification of exact causative genes is important for in silico drug repositioning based on drug-gene-disease relationships. However, the complex polygenic etiology of the autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a challenge in the identification of etiological genes. The network-based core gene identification method can effectively use the interactions between genes and accurately identify the pathogenic genes of ASD. We developed a novel network-based drug repositioning framework that contains three steps: network-specific core gene (NCG) identification, potential therapeutic drug repositioning, and candidate drug validation. First, through the analysis of transcriptome data for 178 brain tissues, gene network analysis identified 365 NCGs in 18 coexpression modules that were significantly correlated with ASD. Second, we evaluated two proposed drug repositioning methods. In one novel approach (dtGSEA), we used the NCGs to probe drug-gene interaction data and identified 35 candidate drugs. In another approach, we compared NCG expression patterns with drug-induced transcriptome data from the Connectivity Map database and found 46 candidate drugs. Third, we validated the candidate drugs using an in-house mental diseases and compounds knowledge graph (MCKG) that contained 7509 compounds, 505 mental diseases, and 123,890 edges. We found a total of 42 candidate drugs that were associated with mental illness, among which 10 drugs (baclofen, sulpiride, estradiol, entinostat, everolimus, fluvoxamine, curcumin, calcitriol, metronidazole, and zinc) were postulated to be associated with ASD. This study proposes a powerful network-based drug repositioning framework and also provides candidate drugs as well as potential drug targets for the subsequent development of ASD therapeutic drugs.

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