Computational modelling of atherosclerosis: developing a community resource

2018 
Rationale: Atherosclerosis is a dynamical process that emerges from the interplay between lipid metabolism, inflammation and innate immunity. The arterial location of atherosclerosis makes it logistically and ethically difficult to study in vivo. To improve our understanding of the disease, we must find alternative ways to investigate its progression. There is currently no computational model of atherosclerosis openly available to the research community for use in future studies and for refinement and development. Objective: Here we develop the first predictive computational model to be made openly available and demonstrate its use for therapeutic hypothesis generation. Methods and Results: We compiled a dataset of relevant interactions from the literature along with available parameters. These were used to build a network model describing atherosclerotic plaque development. A visual map of the network model was produced using the Systems Biology Graphical Notation (SBGN) and a dynamic mathematical description of the network model that enables us to simulate plaque growth was developed and is made available using the Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML). We used this model to investigate whether multi-drug therapeutic interventions could be identified that stimulate plaque regression. The model produced comprised 20 cell types and 41 proteins with 89 species in total. The visual map is available for reuse and refinement using the SBGN Markup Language standard format and the mathematical model is available using the SBML standard format. We used a genetic algorithm to identify a multi-drug intervention hypothesis comprising five drugs that comprehensively reverse plaque growth within the model. Conclusions: We have produced the first predictive mathematical and computational model of atherosclerosis that can be reused and refined by the cardiovascular research community. We demonstrated its potential as a tool for future studies of cardiovascular disease by using it to identify multi-drug intervention hypotheses.
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