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Harnessing endophenotypes and network medicine for Alzheimer's drug repurposing

  1. Author:
    Fang, Jiansong
    Pieper, Andrew A.
    Nussinov,Ruth
    Lee, Garam
    Bekris, Lynn
    Leverenz, James B.
    Cummings, Jeffrey
    Cheng, Feixiong
  2. Author Address

    Guangzhou Univ Chinese Med, Sci & Technol Innovat Ctr, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China.Cleveland Clin, Lerner Res Inst, Genom Med Inst, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA.Univ Hosp Cleveland, Harrington Discovery Inst, Med Ctr, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Psychiat, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Med Ctr, GRECC, Geriatr Psychiat, Cleveland, OH USA.Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Inst Transformat Mol Med, Cleveland, OH USA.Cornell Univ, Weill Cornell Autism Res Program, Weill Cornell Med, New York, NY 10021 USA.Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurosci, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.Natl Canc Inst Frederick, Canc & Inflammat Program, Leidos Biomed Res Inc, Frederick Natl Lab Canc Res, Frederick, MD USA.Tel Aviv Univ, Sackler Sch Med, Dept Human Mol Genet & Biochem, Tel Aviv, Israel.Cleveland Clin, Lou Ruvo Ctr Brain Hlth, Las Vegas, NV USA.Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Mol Med, Cleveland Clin, Lerner Coll Med, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.Cleveland Clin, Neurol Inst, Lou Ruvo Ctr Brain Hlth, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA.Univ Nevada, Chambers Grundy Ctr Transformat Neurosci, Dept Brain Hlth, Sch Integrated Hlth Sci, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA.Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Case Comprehens Canc Ctr, Cleveland, OH USA.
    1. Year: 2020
    2. Date: NOV
    3. Epub Date: 2020 07 13
  1. Journal: Medicinal research reviews
  2. WILEY,
    1. 40
    2. 6
    3. Pages: 2386-2426
  3. Type of Article: Review
  4. ISSN: 0198-6325
  1. Abstract:

    Following two decades of more than 400 clinical trials centered on the "one drug, one target, one disease" paradigm, there is still no effective disease-modifying therapy for Alzheimer's disease (AD). The inherent complexity of AD may challenge this reductionist strategy. Recent observations and advances in network medicine further indicate that AD likely shares common underlying mechanisms and intermediate pathophenotypes, or endophenotypes, with other diseases. In this review, we consider AD pathobiology, disease comorbidity, pleiotropy, and therapeutic development, and construct relevant endophenotype networks to guide future therapeutic development. Specifically, we discuss six main endophenotype hypotheses in AD: amyloidosis, tauopathy, neuroinflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, vascular dysfunction, and lysosomal dysfunction. We further consider how this endophenotype network framework can provide advances in computational and experimental strategies for drug-repurposing and identification of new candidate therapeutic strategies for patients suffering from or at risk for AD. We highlight new opportunities for endophenotype-informed, drug discovery in AD, by exploiting multi-omics data. Integration of genomics, transcriptomics, radiomics, pharmacogenomics, and interactomics (protein-protein interactions) are essential for successful drug discovery. We describe experimental technologies for AD drug discovery including human induced pluripotent stem cells, transgenic mouse/rat models, and population-based retrospective case-control studies that may be integrated with multi-omics in a network medicine methodology. In summary, endophenotype-based network medicine methodologies will promote AD therapeutic development that will optimize the usefulness of available data and support deep phenotyping of the patient heterogeneity for personalized medicine in AD.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1002/med.21709
  2. PMID: 32656864
  3. WOS: 000575949900008

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2020-2021
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