Sex-biased gene expression and gene-regulatory networks of sex-biased adverse event drug targets and drug metabolism genes

Jennifer L. Fisher, Amanda D. Clark, Emma F. Jones, Brittany N. Lasseigne
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Abstract

Previous pharmacovigilance studies and a retroactive review of cancer clinical trial studies identified that women were more likely to experience drug adverse events (i.e., any unintended effects of medication), and men were more likely to experience adverse events that resulted in hospitalization or death. These sex-biased adverse events (SBAEs) are due to many factors not entirely understood, including differences in body mass, hormones, pharmacokinetics, and liver drug metabolism enzymes and transporters. We first identified drugs associated with SBAEs from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database. Next, we evaluated sex-specific gene expression of the known drug targets and metabolism enzymes for those SBAE-associated drugs. We also constructed sex-specific tissue gene-regulatory networks to determine if these known drug targets and metabolism enzymes from the SBAE-associated drugs had sex-specific gene-regulatory network properties and predicted regulatory relationships. We identified liver-specific gene-regulatory differences for drug metabolism genes between males and females, which could explain observed sex differences in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. In addition, we found that ~ 85% of SBAE-associated drug targets had sex-biased gene expression or were core genes of sex- and tissue-specific network communities, significantly higher than randomly selected drug targets. Lastly, we provide the sex-biased drug-adverse event pairs, drug targets, and drug metabolism enzymes as a resource for the research community. Overall, we provide evidence that many SBAEs are associated with drug targets and drug metabolism genes that are differentially expressed and regulated between males and females. These SBAE-associated drug metabolism enzymes and drug targets may be useful for future studies seeking to explain or predict SBAEs.
具有性别差异的不良事件药物靶点和药物代谢基因的基因表达和基因调控网络
以往的药物警戒研究和对癌症临床试验研究的追溯审查发现,女性更容易发生药物不良事件(即药物的任何意外影响),而男性更容易发生导致住院或死亡的不良事件。这些有性别差异的不良事件(SBAEs)是由许多尚未完全明了的因素造成的,包括体重、激素、药代动力学、肝脏药物代谢酶和转运体的差异。我们首先从美国食品和药物管理局不良事件报告系统(FAERS)数据库中确定了与 SBAE 相关的药物。然后,我们评估了这些 SBAE 相关药物的已知药物靶点和代谢酶的性别特异性基因表达。我们还构建了性别特异性组织基因调控网络,以确定这些 SBAE 相关药物的已知药物靶点和代谢酶是否具有性别特异性基因调控网络特性和预测的调控关系。我们发现了男性和女性肝脏中药物代谢基因的特异性基因调控差异,这可以解释药代动力学和药效学中观察到的性别差异。此外,我们还发现约 85% 的 SBAE 相关药物靶点具有性别偏向的基因表达,或者是性别和组织特异性网络群落的核心基因,明显高于随机选择的药物靶点。最后,我们提供了具有性别偏见的药物不良事件对、药物靶点和药物代谢酶,作为研究界的资源。总之,我们提供的证据表明,许多 SBAE 与药物靶点和药物代谢基因相关,而这些基因在男性和女性之间的表达和调控存在差异。这些与 SBAE 相关的药物代谢酶和药物靶点可能对今后寻求解释或预测 SBAE 的研究有用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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