Andrew Kowalczewski, Courtney Sakolish, Plansky Hoang, Xiyuan Liu, Sabir Jacquir, Ivan Rusyn, Zhen Ma
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Utilizing recent advances in human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) technology, nonlinear analysis and machine learning we can create novel tools to evaluate drug-induced cardiotoxicity on human cardiomyocytes. With cardiovascular disease remaining the leading cause of death globally it has become imperative to create effective and modern tools to test the efficacy and toxicity of drugs to combat heart disease. The calcium transient signals recorded from hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) are highly complex and dynamic with great degrees of response characteristics to various drug treatments. However, traditional linear methods often fail to capture the subtle variation in these signals generated by hiPSC-CMs. In this work, we integrated nonlinear analysis, dimensionality reduction techniques and machine learning algorithms for better classifying the contractile signals from hiPSC-CMs in response to different drug exposure. By utilizing extracted parameters from a commercially available high-throughput testing platform, we were able to distinguish the groups with drug treatment from baseline controls, determine the drug exposure relative to IC50 values, and classify the drugs by its unique cardiac responses. By incorporating nonlinear parameters computed by phase space reconstruction, we were able to improve our machine learning algorithm's ability to predict cardiotoxic levels and drug classifications. We also visualized the effects of drug treatment and dosages with dimensionality reduction techniques, t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (t-SNE). We have shown that integration of nonlinear analysis and artificial intelligence has proven to be a powerful tool for analyzing cardiotoxicity and classifying toxic compounds through their mechanistic action.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine publishes rapidly and rigorously peer-reviewed research papers, reviews, clinical case reports, perspectives, and short communications on topics relevant to the development of therapeutic approaches which combine stem or progenitor cells, biomaterials and scaffolds, growth factors and other bioactive agents, and their respective constructs. All papers should deal with research that has a direct or potential impact on the development of novel clinical approaches for the regeneration or repair of tissues and organs.
The journal is multidisciplinary, covering the combination of the principles of life sciences and engineering in efforts to advance medicine and clinical strategies. The journal focuses on the use of cells, materials, and biochemical/mechanical factors in the development of biological functional substitutes that restore, maintain, or improve tissue or organ function. The journal publishes research on any tissue or organ and covers all key aspects of the field, including the development of new biomaterials and processing of scaffolds; the use of different types of cells (mainly stem and progenitor cells) and their culture in specific bioreactors; studies in relevant animal models; and clinical trials in human patients performed under strict regulatory and ethical frameworks. Manuscripts describing the use of advanced methods for the characterization of engineered tissues are also of special interest to the journal readership.