Transcriptomic profiling of human cardiac cells predicts protein kinase inhibitor-associated cardiotoxicity.
Johan G C van HasseltRayees RahmanJens HansenAlan SternJaehee V ShimYuguang XiongAmanda PickardGomathi JayaramanBin HuMilind MahajanJames M GalloJoseph GoldfarbEric A SobieMarc R BirtwistleAvner SchlessingerEvren U AzelogluRavi IyengarPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Kinase inhibitors (KIs) represent an important class of anti-cancer drugs. Although cardiotoxicity is a serious adverse event associated with several KIs, the reasons remain poorly understood, and its prediction remains challenging. We obtain transcriptional profiles of human heart-derived primary cardiomyocyte like cell lines treated with a panel of 26 FDA-approved KIs and classify their effects on subcellular pathways and processes. Individual cardiotoxicity patient reports for these KIs, obtained from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, are used to compute relative risk scores. These are then combined with the cell line-derived transcriptomic datasets through elastic net regression analysis to identify a gene signature that can predict risk of cardiotoxicity. We also identify relationships between cardiotoxicity risk and structural/binding profiles of individual KIs. We conclude that acute transcriptomic changes in cell-based assays combined with drug substructures are predictive of KI-induced cardiotoxicity risk, and that they can be informative for future drug discovery.
Keyphrases
- case report
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- rna seq
- drug discovery
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- high glucose
- protein kinase
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- heart failure
- genome wide
- liver failure
- squamous cell carcinoma
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- dna methylation
- hepatitis b virus
- lymph node
- bone marrow
- respiratory failure
- cell cycle arrest
- heat shock protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress