PLoS Computational Biology (Sep 2010)

Drug-induced regulation of target expression.

  • Murat Iskar,
  • Murat Iskar,
  • Monica Campillos,
  • Michael Kuhn,
  • Lars Juhl Jensen,
  • Vera van Noort,
  • Peer Bork

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000925
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 9
p. e1000925

Abstract

Read online

Drug perturbations of human cells lead to complex responses upon target binding. One of the known mechanisms is a (positive or negative) feedback loop that adjusts the expression level of the respective target protein. To quantify this mechanism systems-wide in an unbiased way, drug-induced differential expression of drug target mRNA was examined in three cell lines using the Connectivity Map. To overcome various biases in this valuable resource, we have developed a computational normalization and scoring procedure that is applicable to gene expression recording upon heterogeneous drug treatments. In 1290 drug-target relations, corresponding to 466 drugs acting on 167 drug targets studied, 8% of the targets are subject to regulation at the mRNA level. We confirmed systematically that in particular G-protein coupled receptors, when serving as known targets, are regulated upon drug treatment. We further newly identified drug-induced differential regulation of Lanosterol 14-alpha demethylase, Endoplasmin, DNA topoisomerase 2-alpha and Calmodulin 1. The feedback regulation in these and other targets is likely to be relevant for the success or failure of the molecular intervention.