open access publication

Article, 2024

A Lifelike guided journey through the pathophysiology of pulmonary hypertension—from measured metabolites to the mechanism of action of drugs

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, ISSN 2297-055X, Volume 11, Page 1341145, 10.3389/fcvm.2024.1341145

Contributors

Weinstein, Nathan [1] Carlsen, Jørn [1] Schulz, Sebastian [2] Stapleton, Timothy [2] Henriksen, Hanne Hee 0000-0003-1323-9718 [1] Travnik, Evelyn (Corresponding author) [2] Johansson, Pär Ingemar 0000-0001-9778-5964 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Rigshospitalet
  2. [NORA names: Capital Region of Denmark; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Technical University of Denmark
  4. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Introduction: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a pathological condition that affects approximately 1% of the population. The prognosis for many patients is poor, even after treatment. Our knowledge about the pathophysiological mechanisms that cause or are involved in the progression of PH is incomplete. Additionally, the mechanism of action of many drugs used to treat pulmonary hypertension, including sotatercept, requires elucidation. Methods: Using our graph-powered knowledge mining software Lifelike in combination with a very small patient metabolite data set, we demonstrate how we derive detailed mechanistic hypotheses on the mechanisms of PH pathophysiology and clinical drugs. Results: In PH patients, the concentration of hypoxanthine, 12(S)-HETE, glutamic acid, and sphingosine 1 phosphate is significantly higher, while the concentration of L-arginine and L-histidine is lower than in healthy controls. Using the graph-based data analysis, gene ontology, and semantic association capabilities of Lifelike, led us to connect the differentially expressed metabolites with G-protein signaling and SRC. Then, we associated SRC with IL6 signaling. Subsequently, we found associations that connect SRC, and IL6 to activin and BMP signaling. Lastly, we analyzed the mechanisms of action of several existing and novel pharmacological treatments for PH. Lifelike elucidated the interplay between G-protein, IL6, activin, and BMP signaling. Those pathways regulate hallmark pathophysiological processes of PH, including vasoconstriction, endothelial barrier function, cell proliferation, and apoptosis. Discussion: The results highlight the importance of SRC, ERK1, AKT, and MLC activity in PH. The molecular pathways affected by existing and novel treatments for PH also converge on these molecules. Importantly, sotatercept affects SRC, ERK1, AKT, and MLC simultaneously. The present study shows the power of mining knowledge graphs using Lifelike's diverse set of data analytics functionalities for developing knowledge-driven hypotheses on PH pathophysiological and drug mechanisms and their interactions. We believe that Lifelike and our presented approach will be valuable for future mechanistic studies of PH, other diseases, and drugs.

Keywords

Akt, BMP, BMP signaling, Data Analytics Function, ERK1, G protein signaling, G-protein, Gene Ontology, IL6, IL6 signaling, L-arginine, L-histidine, MLC, MLC activation, PH pathophysiology, PH patients, Src, acid, action, action of drugs, activin, activity, analysis, analytic functions, apoptosis, association, association capability, barrier function, capability, cell proliferation, cells, clinical drugs, combination, concentration, concentrations of L-arginine, concentrations of hypoxanthine, conditions, control, data, data analysis, differentially expressed metabolites, differentiation, disease, drug, drug mechanisms, elucidation, endothelial barrier function, function, genes, glutamic acid, graph, healthy controls, hypertension, hypothesis, hypoxanthine, interaction, journey, knowledge, knowledge graph, lifelikeness, mechanism, mechanism of action, mechanism of action of drugs, mechanistic hypotheses, mechanistic studies, metabolite data, metabolites, mining knowledge graphs, molecular pathways, molecules, novel treatment, ontology, pathological conditions, pathophysiological mechanisms, pathophysiological processes, pathophysiology, pathway, patients, pharmacological treatment, population, power, process, prognosis, progression, progression of PH, proliferation, pulmonary hypertension, results, signal, sotatercept, sphingosine, sphingosine 1-phosphate, study, study of pH, treat pulmonary hypertension, treatment, vasoconstriction

Funders

  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

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