Integrative Multi-Omics for Diagnosis, Treatments, and Drug Discovery of Aging-Related Neuronal Diseases
Author: Min Tang
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Published: 2022-11-23
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13: 2832506674
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAs the cost of high-throughput sequencing goes down, huge volumes of biological and medical data have been produced from various sequencing platforms at multiple molecular levels including genome, transcriptome, proteome, epigenome, metabolome, and so on. For a long time, data analysis on single molecular levels has paved the way to answer many important research questions. However, many Aging-Related Neuronal Diseases (ARNDs) and Central Nervous System (CNS) aging involve interactions of molecules from multiple molecular levels, in which conclusions based on single molecular levels are usually incomplete and sometimes misleading. In these scenarios, multi-omics data analysis has unprecedentedly helped capture much more useful information for the diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and drug discovery of ARNDs. The first step towards a multi-omics analysis is to establish reliable and robust multi-omics datasets. In the past years, a few important ARNDs-associated multi-omics databases like Allen Brain have been constructed, which raised immediate needs like data curation, normalization, interpretation, and visualization for integrative multi-omics explorations. Though there have been several well-established multi-omics databases for ARNDs like Alzheimer’s disease, similar databases for other ARNDs are still in urgent need. After the databases establish, many computational tools and experiential strategies should be developed specifically for them. First, the multi-omics data are usually extremely noisy, complex, heterogeneous and in high dimension, which presents the need for appropriate denoising and dimension reduction methods. Second, since the multi-omics and non-omics data like pathological and clinical data are usually in different data spaces, a useful algorithm to mapping them into the same data space and integrate them is nontrivial. In the multi-omics era, there are numerous data-centric tools for the integration of multi-omics datasets, which could be generally divided into three categories: unsupervised, supervised, and semi-supervised methods. Commonly used algorithms include but not limited to Bayesian-based methods, Network-based methods, multi-step analysis methods, and multiple kernel learning methods. Third, methods are needed in studying and verifying the association between two or more levels of multi-omics data and non-omics data. For example, expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis is widely used to infer the association between a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and the expression of a gene. Recently, the association between omics data and more complex data like pathological and clinical imaging data has been a hot research topic. The outcomes may reveal the underlying molecular mechanism and promote de novo drug design as well as drug repurposing for ARNDs. Here, we welcome investigators to share their Original Research, Review, Mini Review, Hypothesis and Theory, Perspective, Conceptual Analysis, Data Report, Brief Research Report, Code related to multi-omics studies of ARNDs, which can be applied for better diagnosis, treatment, prognosis and drug discovery of human diseases in the future era of precision medicine. Potential contents include but are not limited to the following: ▪ Methods for integrating, interpreting, or visualizing two or more omics data. ▪ Methods for identifying interactions between different data modalities. ▪ Methods for disease subtyping, biomarker prediction. ▪ Machine learning or deep learning methods on dimensional reduction and feature selection for big noisy data. ▪ Methods for studying the association among different omics data or between omics and non-omics data like clinical, pathological, and imaging data. ▪ Review of multi-omics resource about ARNDs and/or CNS aging. ▪ Experimental validation of biomarkers identified from multi-omics data analysis. ▪ Disease diagnosis and prognosis prediction from imaging and non-imaging data analysis, or both. ▪ Clinical applications or validations of findings from multi-omics data analysis.