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Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification

Overall cellular responses to biologically-relevant stimuli are mediated by networks of simpler lower-level processes. Although information about some of these processes can now be obtained by visualizing and recording events at the molecular level, this is still possible only in especially favorabl...

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Autores principales: Fribourg, Miguel, Logothetis, Diomedes E., González-Maeso, Javier, Sealfon, Stuart C., Galocha-Iragüen, Belén, Las-Heras Andrés, Fernando, Brezina, Vladimir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5330533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28192423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005376
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author Fribourg, Miguel
Logothetis, Diomedes E.
González-Maeso, Javier
Sealfon, Stuart C.
Galocha-Iragüen, Belén
Las-Heras Andrés, Fernando
Brezina, Vladimir
author_facet Fribourg, Miguel
Logothetis, Diomedes E.
González-Maeso, Javier
Sealfon, Stuart C.
Galocha-Iragüen, Belén
Las-Heras Andrés, Fernando
Brezina, Vladimir
author_sort Fribourg, Miguel
collection PubMed
description Overall cellular responses to biologically-relevant stimuli are mediated by networks of simpler lower-level processes. Although information about some of these processes can now be obtained by visualizing and recording events at the molecular level, this is still possible only in especially favorable cases. Therefore the development of methods to extract the dynamics and relationships between the different lower-level (microscopic) processes from the overall (macroscopic) response remains a crucial challenge in the understanding of many aspects of physiology. Here we have devised a hybrid computational-analytical method to accomplish this task, the SYStems-based MOLecular kinetic scheme Extractor (SYSMOLE). SYSMOLE utilizes system-identification input-output analysis to obtain a transfer function between the stimulus and the overall cellular response in the Laplace-transformed domain. It then derives a Markov-chain state molecular kinetic scheme uniquely associated with the transfer function by means of a classification procedure and an analytical step that imposes general biological constraints. We first tested SYSMOLE with synthetic data and evaluated its performance in terms of its rate of convergence to the correct molecular kinetic scheme and its robustness to noise. We then examined its performance on real experimental traces by analyzing macroscopic calcium-current traces elicited by membrane depolarization. SYSMOLE derived the correct, previously known molecular kinetic scheme describing the activation and inactivation of the underlying calcium channels and correctly identified the accepted mechanism of action of nifedipine, a calcium-channel blocker clinically used in patients with cardiovascular disease. Finally, we applied SYSMOLE to study the pharmacology of a new class of glutamate antipsychotic drugs and their crosstalk mechanism through a heteromeric complex of G protein-coupled receptors. Our results indicate that our methodology can be successfully applied to accurately derive molecular kinetic schemes from experimental macroscopic traces, and we anticipate that it may be useful in the study of a wide variety of biological systems.
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spelling pubmed-53305332017-03-10 Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification Fribourg, Miguel Logothetis, Diomedes E. González-Maeso, Javier Sealfon, Stuart C. Galocha-Iragüen, Belén Las-Heras Andrés, Fernando Brezina, Vladimir PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Overall cellular responses to biologically-relevant stimuli are mediated by networks of simpler lower-level processes. Although information about some of these processes can now be obtained by visualizing and recording events at the molecular level, this is still possible only in especially favorable cases. Therefore the development of methods to extract the dynamics and relationships between the different lower-level (microscopic) processes from the overall (macroscopic) response remains a crucial challenge in the understanding of many aspects of physiology. Here we have devised a hybrid computational-analytical method to accomplish this task, the SYStems-based MOLecular kinetic scheme Extractor (SYSMOLE). SYSMOLE utilizes system-identification input-output analysis to obtain a transfer function between the stimulus and the overall cellular response in the Laplace-transformed domain. It then derives a Markov-chain state molecular kinetic scheme uniquely associated with the transfer function by means of a classification procedure and an analytical step that imposes general biological constraints. We first tested SYSMOLE with synthetic data and evaluated its performance in terms of its rate of convergence to the correct molecular kinetic scheme and its robustness to noise. We then examined its performance on real experimental traces by analyzing macroscopic calcium-current traces elicited by membrane depolarization. SYSMOLE derived the correct, previously known molecular kinetic scheme describing the activation and inactivation of the underlying calcium channels and correctly identified the accepted mechanism of action of nifedipine, a calcium-channel blocker clinically used in patients with cardiovascular disease. Finally, we applied SYSMOLE to study the pharmacology of a new class of glutamate antipsychotic drugs and their crosstalk mechanism through a heteromeric complex of G protein-coupled receptors. Our results indicate that our methodology can be successfully applied to accurately derive molecular kinetic schemes from experimental macroscopic traces, and we anticipate that it may be useful in the study of a wide variety of biological systems. Public Library of Science 2017-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC5330533/ /pubmed/28192423 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005376 Text en © 2017 Fribourg et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fribourg, Miguel
Logothetis, Diomedes E.
González-Maeso, Javier
Sealfon, Stuart C.
Galocha-Iragüen, Belén
Las-Heras Andrés, Fernando
Brezina, Vladimir
Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title_full Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title_fullStr Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title_full_unstemmed Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title_short Elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
title_sort elucidation of molecular kinetic schemes from macroscopic traces using system identification
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5330533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28192423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005376
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