Discovery of therapeutic agents for prostate cancer using genome-scale metabolic modeling and drug repositioning
Journal article, 2019

Genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) offer insights into cancer metabolism and have been used to identify potential biomarkers and drug targets. Drug repositioning is a time- and cost-effective method of drug discovery that can be applied together with GEMs for effective cancer treatment. Methods: In this study, we reconstruct a prostate cancer (PRAD)-specific GEM for exploring prostate cancer metabolism and also repurposing new therapeutic agents that can be used in development of effective cancer treatment. We integrate global gene expression profiling of cell lines with >1000 different drugs through the use of prostate cancer GEM and predict possible drug-gene interactions. Findings: We identify the key reactions with altered fluxes based on the gene expression changes and predict the potential drug effect in prostate cancer treatment. We find that sulfamethoxypyridazine, azlocillin, hydroflumethiazide, and ifenprodil can be repurposed for the treatment of prostate cancer based on an in silico cell viability assay. Finally, we validate the effect of ifenprodil using an in vitro cell assay and show its inhibitory effect on a prostate cancer cell line. Interpretation: Our approach demonstate how GEMs can be used to predict therapeutic agents for cancer treatment based on drug repositioning. Besides, it paved a way and shed a light on the applicability of computational models to real-world biomedical or pharmaceutical problems.

Drug repurposing

Prostate cancer

Genome-scale metabolic models

Approved drugs

Drug repositioning

Author

Beste Turanli

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Istanbul Medeniyet University

Marmara University

C. Zhang

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Woonghee Kim

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Rui Benfeitas

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Mathias Uhlen

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Kazim Y. Arga

Marmara University

Adil Mardinoglu

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

King's College London

EBioMedicine

2352-3964 (eISSN)

Vol. 42 386-396

Subject Categories

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Bioinformatics and Systems Biology

Cancer and Oncology

DOI

10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.03.009

More information

Latest update

10/9/2022