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Digital Human Meeting FAS, July 23, 2001 NLM, Bethesda, MD

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Presentation on theme: "Digital Human Meeting FAS, July 23, 2001 NLM, Bethesda, MD"— Presentation transcript:

1 Digital Human Meeting FAS, July 23, 2001 NLM, Bethesda, MD

2 “Biology must graduate from the cartoon diagram.”
-Bruce Alberts, NAS President Princeton Institute for Integrative Genomics Symposium on Biological Networks May 2001

3 The Physiome Sciences Vision…
Providing technology to enable the creation of computer-based biological models from subcellular to organism levels Promoting the acceptance of standards to permit the integration, exchange, and extension of models across organizational and geographic boundaries

4 Hierarchical modeling of biology
Physiome Sciences’ Approach Hierarchical modeling of biology Organ Systems Individual Pathways Cell Organs Signaling systems

5 Pitfalls in building biological models
“Point” solutions Models should be reusable and extensible “Black boxes” Data and assumptions should be accessible Static data content Models should be able to integrate new data as they become available Defined ADME Spelled out Toxicology

6 Overcoming pitfalls: In Silico CellTM architecture
3rd party applications Modeling tools Mathematics Database CellMLTM MathML Simulations

7 What is CellMLTM? An extensible mark-up language (XML) that
Describes structure and mathematics of (sub)cellular models Embeds metadata and documentation Defines an extension mechanism Facilitates re-use of models and model components (encapsulation) Biological scope examples version 1.0: Excitable cells Reaction networks Signaling pathways

8 Why CellMLTM? Models are traditionally hard-coded in C, C++, Matlab, Mathematica Publications often contain an incomplete set of equations and data Very difficult to duplicate results and to exchange and extend models CellML permits users to exchange all the information needed to represent (and run) a model

9 Development of CellMLTM as an open standard
“Physiome” Mark-Up Languages (CellML, FieldML, AnatML) developed as open standards in collaboration with University of Auckland Website: Mailing List: Edit/Run/Validate Tools for CellML (Q3 2001) CellML model repository (Q4 2001)

10 Modeling tool: Pathway Editor
Source: Jim Broach, Princeton University Modeling tool: Pathway Editor

11 Modeling tool: Cell Editor
Permits integration of biochemistry (pathways) and electrophysiology within a cell-based tool Outputs models to other software platforms for assembling more complex (organ, system) models

12 Modeling cardiac heterogeneity: single cell response to drug
Experimental data Simulated Data from Burashnikov and Antzelevitch, 1998 BCL = 300, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, 6000 msec

13 Modeling cardiac heterogeneity: integrate from single cell to tissue
Anatomy Ion channel density Physiology AP IKs Ito Epi INa (late) Endo ECG 1x 6x Expression level Anatomy Genome Physiome

14 Predicting cardiac safety Antihistamines
Simulated ECG analysis Simulated cellular APs at 3 concentrations Input data DQT Amount of drug block Worse DAPD DQT Better DAPD Concentration (µM) IKs IKr Ito

15 Summary Physiome is working to provide a flexible framework for modeling biology across scales from the subcellular upwards. Spatial heterogeneity in cardiac muscle as a case study towards integrated modeling of the heart. XML-based standards (CellML, SBML, FieldML, AnatML) will facilitate exchange and reuse of models and components. We’ll have tools out soon. Open source? We’re interested, but have yet to adopt an official stance.

16 for more info:


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