| Literature DB >> 25825654 |
Vladimir Kuznetsov1, Hwee Kuan Lee2, Sebastian Maurer-Stroh3, Maria Judit Molnár4, Sandor Pongor5, Birgit Eisenhaber2, Frank Eisenhaber6.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: The currently hyped expectation of personalized medicine is often associated with just achieving the information technology led integration of biomolecular sequencing, expression and histopathological bioimaging data with clinical records at the individual patients' level as if the significant biomedical conclusions would be its more or less mandatory result. It remains a sad fact that many, if not most biomolecular mechanisms that translate the human genomic information into phenotypes are not known and, thus, most of the molecular and cellular data cannot be interpreted in terms of biomedically relevant conclusions. Whereas the historical trend will certainly be into the general direction of personalized diagnostics and cures, the temperate view suggests that biomedical applications that rely either on the comparison of biomolecular sequences and/or on the already known biomolecular mechanisms have much greater chances to enter clinical practice soon. In addition to considering the general trends, we exemplarily review advances in the area of cancer biomarker discovery, in the clinically relevant characterization of patient-specific viral and bacterial pathogens (with emphasis on drug selection for influenza and enterohemorrhagic E. coli) as well as progress in the automated assessment of histopathological images. As molecular and cellular data analysis will become instrumental for achieving desirable clinical outcomes, the role of bioinformatics and computational biology approaches will dramatically grow. AUTHOREntities:
Keywords: AIDS; Bioinformatics; Cancer biomarker; Cancer mutation; Digital pathology; Dry eye; Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli; Expression profiling; Genome sequencing; Glaucoma; H1N1; HIV; Histopathological bioimaging; Influenza; Quorum sensing; Tumor segmentation
Year: 2013 PMID: 25825654 PMCID: PMC4336111 DOI: 10.1186/2047-2501-1-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Inf Sci Syst ISSN: 2047-2501
Figure 1The link between an influenza virus mutation and the altered course of infection. Schematic representation showing how a single viral amino acid mutation (right, red balls) can affect host cell receptor (blue balls) interaction, which can alter viral localization and where the infection takes place, which in turn can affect severity and symptoms for the patient (left). A thorough understanding of the effects of mutations on biological mechanisms is also important for other human diseases such as cancer as well as patient-specific response to different treatments. Attribution of images: The 3 left-most images of the composed figure are public domain or under free-to-use licenses at Wikimedia commons from the following sources: patient body and organ [118] and infected cell [119].
Predicted potentially effective drugs against enterohemorrhagic
| Antibiotic | Exp. | Comp. |
|---|---|---|
| Piperacillin/Tazobactam | R* | S |
| Cefoxitin | R |
|
| Ceftazidim | R |
|
| Cefpodoxim | R |
|
| Imipenem | S |
|
| Meropenem | S |
|
| Amikacin | S |
|
| Gentamicin | S |
|
| Kanamycin | S |
|
| Tobramycin | S |
|
| Streptomycin | R |
|
| Tetracyclin | R |
|
| Nitrofurantoin | S |
|
| Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazol | R |
|
| Fosfomycin | S |
|
Experimentally measured (Exp.) versus computationally predicted (Comp.) antibiotics susceptibility profile. R … resistant; S… sensitive; * … defined as resistant (AES VITEK). Prediction and experimentally determined results coincide except for two cases (Piperacillin/Tazobactam and Fosfomycin) which are discussed in the text in detail.