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Integrating cell morphology with gene expression and chemical structure to aid mitochondrial toxicity detection.

Srijit SealJordi Carreras-PuigvertMaria-Anna TrapotsiHongbin YangOla SpjuthAndreas Bender
Published in: Communications biology (2022)
Mitochondrial toxicity is an important safety endpoint in drug discovery. Models based solely on chemical structure for predicting mitochondrial toxicity are currently limited in accuracy and applicability domain to the chemical space of the training compounds. In this work, we aimed to utilize both -omics and chemical data to push beyond the state-of-the-art. We combined Cell Painting and Gene Expression data with chemical structural information from Morgan fingerprints for 382 chemical perturbants tested in the Tox21 mitochondrial membrane depolarization assay. We observed that mitochondrial toxicants differ from non-toxic compounds in morphological space and identified compound clusters having similar mechanisms of mitochondrial toxicity, thereby indicating that morphological space provides biological insights related to mechanisms of action of this endpoint. We further showed that models combining Cell Painting, Gene Expression features and Morgan fingerprints improved model performance on an external test set of 244 compounds by 60% (in terms of F1 score) and improved extrapolation to new chemical space. The performance of our combined models was comparable with dedicated in vitro assays for mitochondrial toxicity. Our results suggest that combining chemical descriptors with biological readouts enhances the detection of mitochondrial toxicants, with practical implications in drug discovery.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • gene expression
  • drug discovery
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • high throughput
  • healthcare
  • stem cells
  • machine learning
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • real time pcr
  • health information
  • social media