Artificial neural networks enable genome-scale simulations of intracellular signaling
Journal article, 2022

Mammalian cells adapt their functional state in response to external signals in form of ligands that bind receptors on the cell-surface. Mechanistically, this involves signal-processing through a complex network of molecular interactions that govern transcription factor activity patterns. Computer simulations of the information flow through this network could help predict cellular responses in health and disease. Here we develop a recurrent neural network framework constrained by prior knowledge of the signaling network with ligand-concentrations as input and transcription factor-activity as output. Applied to synthetic data, it predicts unseen test-data (Pearson correlation r = 0.98) and the effects of gene knockouts (r = 0.8). We stimulate macrophages with 59 different ligands, with and without the addition of lipopolysaccharide, and collect transcriptomics data. The framework predicts this data under cross-validation (r = 0.8) and knockout simulations suggest a role for RIPK1 in modulating the lipopolysaccharide response. This work demonstrates the feasibility of genome-scale simulations of intracellular signaling. Many diseases are caused by disruptions to the network of biochemical reactions that allow cells to respond to external signals. Here Nilsson et al develop a method to simulate cellular signaling using artificial neural networks to predict cellular responses and activities of signaling molecules.

Author

Avlant Nilsson

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Joshua M. Peters

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Ragon Institute

Nikolaos Meimetis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Bryan Bryson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Ragon Institute

Douglas A. Lauffenburger

Ragon Institute

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Nature Communications

2041-1723 (ISSN) 20411723 (eISSN)

Vol. 13 1 3069

Subject Categories

Biophysics

Bioinformatics (Computational Biology)

Bioinformatics and Systems Biology

DOI

10.1038/s41467-022-30684-y

PubMed

35654811

More information

Latest update

6/28/2022