The use of genomic variants to drive drug repurposing for chronic hepatitis B

One of the main challenges in personalized medicine is to establish and apply a large number of variants from genomic databases into clinical diagnostics and further facilitate genome-driven drug repurposing. By utilizing biological chronic hepatitis B infection (CHB) risk genes, our study proposed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry and biophysics reports 2022-09, Vol.31, p.101307-101307, Article 101307
Hauptverfasser: Irham, Lalu Muhammad, Adikusuma, Wirawan, Perwitasari, Dyah Aryani, Dania, Haafizah, Maliza, Rita, Faridah, Imaniar Noor, Santri, Ichtiarini Nurullita, Phiri, Yohane Vincent Abero, Cheung, Rocky
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One of the main challenges in personalized medicine is to establish and apply a large number of variants from genomic databases into clinical diagnostics and further facilitate genome-driven drug repurposing. By utilizing biological chronic hepatitis B infection (CHB) risk genes, our study proposed a systematic approach to use genomic variants to drive drug repurposing for CHB. The genomic variants were retrieved from the Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) and Phenome-Wide Association Study (PheWAS) databases. Then, the biological CHB risk genes crucial for CHB progression were prioritized based on the scoring system devised with five strict functional annotation criteria. A score of ≥ 2 were categorized as the biological CHB risk genes and further shed light on drug target genes for CHB treatments. Overlapping druggable targets were identified using two drug databases (DrugBank and Drug-Gene Interaction Database (DGIdb)). A total of 44 biological CHB risk genes were screened based on the scoring system from five functional annotation criteria. Interestingly, we found 6 druggable targets that overlapped with 18 drugs with status of undergoing clinical trials for CHB, and 9 druggable targets that overlapped with 20 drugs undergoing preclinical investigations for CHB. Eight druggable targets were identified, overlapping with 25 drugs that can potentially be repurposed for CHB. Notably, CD40 and HLA-DPB1 were identified as promising targets for CHB drug repurposing based on the target scores. Through the integration of genomic variants and a bioinformatic approach, our findings suggested the plausibility of CHB genomic variant-driven drug repurposing for CHB. •The feasibility of utilizing genomic variants can provide novel biological insight and facilitate genomic-driven drug repurposing for chronic hepatitis B.•The use of genomic information can be translated into clinical implementation through genomic-based therapies and guidance for drug discovery.•Our findings suggested the plausibility of chronic hepatitis B genomic-driven drug repurposing for chronic hepatitis B.
ISSN:2405-5808
2405-5808
DOI:10.1016/j.bbrep.2022.101307