A human-based multi-gene signature enables quantitative drug repurposing for metabolic disease

Author:

Timmons James A12ORCID,Anighoro Andrew3,Brogan Robert J4,Stahl Jack5,Wahlestedt Claes5,Farquhar David Gordon2,Taylor-King Jake3,Volmar Claude-Henry5ORCID,Kraus William E6ORCID,Phillips Stuart M7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London

2. Augur Precision Medicine LTD

3. Relation Therapeutics LTD

4. Fiona Stanley Hospital

5. Center for Therapeutic Innovation, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami

6. School of Medicine, Duke University

7. Faculty of Science, Kinesiology, McMaster University

Abstract

Insulin resistance (IR) contributes to the pathophysiology of diabetes, dementia, viral infection, and cardiovascular disease. Drug repurposing (DR) may identify treatments for IR; however, barriers include uncertainty whether in vitro transcriptomic assays yield quantitative pharmacological data, or how to optimise assay design to best reflect in vivo human disease. We developed a clinical-based human tissue IR signature by combining lifestyle-mediated treatment responses (>500 human adipose and muscle biopsies) with biomarkers of disease status (fasting IR from >1200 biopsies). The assay identified a chemically diverse set of >130 positively acting compounds, highly enriched in true positives, that targeted 73 proteins regulating IR pathways. Our multi-gene RNA assay score reflected the quantitative pharmacological properties of a set of epidermal growth factor receptor-related tyrosine kinase inhibitors, providing insight into drug target specificity; an observation supported by deep learning-based genome-wide predicted pharmacology. Several drugs identified are suitable for evaluation in patients, particularly those with either acute or severe chronic IR.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

National Institute on Aging

Queen Mary University London

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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