Towards Structural Systems Pharmacology to Study Complex Diseases and Personalized Medicine
Author(s) -
Lei Xie,
Xiaoxia Ge,
Hepan Tan,
Li Xie,
Yinliang Zhang,
Thomas D. Hart,
Xiaowei Yang,
Philip E. Bourne
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos computational biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.628
H-Index - 182
eISSN - 1553-7358
pISSN - 1553-734X
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003554
Subject(s) - pharmacogenomics , genomics , personalized medicine , context (archaeology) , computational biology , systems pharmacology , drug discovery , functional genomics , systems biology , drug action , computer science , genome wide association study , data science , genome , bioinformatics , biology , drug , genetics , pharmacology , single nucleotide polymorphism , paleontology , genotype , gene
Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS), whole genome sequencing, and high-throughput omics techniques have generated vast amounts of genotypic and molecular phenotypic data. However, these data have not yet been fully explored to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of drug discovery, which continues along a one-drug-one-target-one-disease paradigm. As a partial consequence, both the cost to launch a new drug and the attrition rate are increasing. Systems pharmacology and pharmacogenomics are emerging to exploit the available data and potentially reverse this trend, but, as we argue here, more is needed. To understand the impact of genetic, epigenetic, and environmental factors on drug action, we must study the structural energetics and dynamics of molecular interactions in the context of the whole human genome and interactome. Such an approach requires an integrative modeling framework for drug action that leverages advances in data-driven statistical modeling and mechanism-based multiscale modeling and transforms heterogeneous data from GWAS, high-throughput sequencing, structural genomics, functional genomics, and chemical genomics into unified knowledge. This is not a small task, but, as reviewed here, progress is being made towards the final goal of personalized medicines for the treatment of complex diseases.
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