February 26, 2018
InSysBio continues to investigate the mechanisms underlying Alzheimer’s disease (AD) using the quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) modeling approach. The part of QSP model describing tau protein was published in the PLOS ONE journal. This is one of more than dozen InSysBio publications in AD area during last seven years.
There is still no clear understanding what is the driving force of AD progression. The main hypotheses of the pathology are based on amyloid beta plaques or tau protein aggregation.
Tau protein (or MAPT, microtubule-associated protein tau) stabilizes the cytoskeleton in normal cells, but it doesn’t function properly in neurons of AD patients, it undergoes hyperphosphorylation and aggregates into neurofibrillary tangles within neurons. Normally, only some of the numerous phosphorylation sites of tau are phosphorylated. Therefore drugs for the tauopathies treatment could target pathological tau phosphorylation.
Different phosphorylation states contribute unequally in the pathology. So understanding the relative contribution of each kinase and phosphatase to phosphorylation of distinct sites is important for searching the principal drug targets. This was the goal of the work.
If a protein has n phosphorylation sites, then there are 2n possible phosphorylation states. Furthermore, the sequence of protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation processes is regulated in a complicated way. The model developers assumed that phosphorylation of distinct sites is partially independent. It allowed to overcome the combinatorial explosion problem.
Four kinases (GSK3?, PKA, CDK5 and p38?) and one phosphatase (PP2A) were selected from the plurality of tau (de)phosphorylating enzymes. Ten phosphorylation sites which are of specific interest for the clinical research were selected from a few dozens of potentially phosphorylable sites of tau protein. This selection was based on the published experimental data. The modelers also have incorporated so-called pseudoresidue which described phosphorylation sites aside from the ten described above. This is the first effort of estimation of tau protein state sensitivity to key enzymes using real kinetic data.
“We’ve taken the first step in understanding of (de)phosphorylation patterns of each tau protein residue by different enzymes. Our model may suggest the role of each tau kinase or phosphatase plays in AD pathogenesis as well as the most potent targets for its treatment,” commented Alexander Stepanov, the leading contributor of the article.
“The published model is another brick in the integrated QSP model which is now developed in InSysBio that may help to find the treatment of AD,” said Tatiana Karelina, PhD, Head of the Neurodegenerative Diseases modeling group at InSysBio.
About InSysBio
InSysBio (formerly Institute for System Biology Moscow) was founded in 2004 and has an extensive track record of helping pharmaceutical companies to make right decisions on the critical stages of drug research and development by application of quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) modeling. InSysBio’s innovative approach has already become a part of the drug development process implemented by our strategic partners: nowadays there are more than 100 completed projects in collaboration with leaders of pharmaceutical industry. The company has published a lot of scientific studies in various therapeutic areas. InSysBio team is developing software and tools for QSP and continuously improves methods for biological modeling. For more information about InSysBio, its solutions and services, visit www.insysbio.com.
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04 Sep 2024 16:07
Now B cells model reflects the current views on the processes
InSysBio launches Immune Response Template (IRT) version 3.6.3. IRT represents a QSP platform of immune system, simultaneously, being a tool for development of models related to immune system
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10 Sep 2024 18:36
InSysBio team to publish the new article in PSPJournal
The new article "Quantitative systems pharmacology model of α-synuclein pathology in Parkinson's disease-like mouse for investigation of passive immunotherapy mechanisms" by Olga Ivanova and Tatiana Karelina was published in PSPJournal at the end of August 2024
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11 Sep 2024 15:25
InSysBio to take part in ACoP 2024
InSysBio announces its participation in the 15th American Conference on Pharmacometrics (ACoP). Oleg Demin Jr, Scientific Director, Oncology & Immuno-Oncology, will be a co-chair and speaker of the session "Advancing QSP: From Virtual Patient To Digital Twin". InSysBio team is going to present its modeling services & software to optimize drug development at the Booth #11 and 9 posters in frames of the Conference
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