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Endocrine Abstracts (2016) 41 GP57 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.41.GP57

ECE2016 Guided Posters Cardiovascular endocrinology (9 abstracts)

Prioritizing drug targets for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease based on comorbidity network analysis

Thanh-Phuong Nguyen 1 , Thomas Sauter 1 , Laura Caberlotto 3 , Frank Lammert 4 & Jochen G Schneider 2,


1University of Luxembourg, Life Science Research Unit Systems Biology Group, Luxembourg, Luxembourg; 2Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxembourg; 3The Microsoft Research, University of Trento Centre for Computational Systems Biology, Rovereto, Italy; 4Saarland University Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine II, Homburg, Germany.


Background and aims: Non alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is highly associated with other components of the metabolic syndrome, in particular obesity and diabetes. However, systematic network medicine approach of the complex phenotypic dependencies and comorbidities has yet to be performed. Our aim now is to identify novel drug targets for NAFLD treatment by a systematic in silico network analysis.

Methods: We constructed an interaction network of curated genes relevant to NAFLD and its comorbid diseases of interest. Network mining was applied to characterize the NAFLD comorbidity network, and identify the key genes based on centrality ranking. Large-scale shortest path analyses showed NAFLD connectivity to other comorbid diseases and allowed inferring the molecular mechanisms underlying comorbidities.

Results: Overall, we identified 594 disease genes, most of which (38.7%) were related to glucose metabolism disorders (n=230). Lipid metabolism disorders were represented by 116 genes, and obesity by 114 genes; 19 genes were associated with metabolic syndrome, and 30 genes with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Network construction on the 594 disease genes resulted in a network of 2175 proteins and 4605 interactions from the human protein reference database. Among the most central genes in the network, two genes were directly related to NAFLD (TGBF1 and F2) and eight new candidate genes were inferred. We identified ten key genes that were related to at least two diseases and then consecutively regulated the comorbidities between the diseases. Of note, most of the ten genes were related to lipid and glucose metabolism, and two (INS, IRS1) were involved in aldosterone-regulated sodium absorption and diabetes. Furthermore, we found a large number of paths linking the NAFLD-related genes to glucose and lipid metabolism disorders and obesity (46 143, 22 000 and 21 516 paths, respectively), in particular genes related to adipocytokine and PPAR signaling and cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction.

Conclusions: The comorbidity network analysis of NAFLD allowed the identification of genes that could represent the most promising molecular targets for prioritization of drug therapy in NAFLD.

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