Abstract

The adenosine monophosphate activated protein kinase (AMPK) is critical in the regulation of important cellular functions such as lipid, glucose, and protein metabolism; mitochondrial biogenesis and autophagy; and cellular growth. In many diseases—such as metabolic syndrome, obesity, diabetes, and also cancer—activation of AMPK is beneficial. Therefore, there is growing interest in AMPK activators that act either by direct action on the enzyme itself or by indirect activation of upstream regulators. Many natural compounds have been described that activate AMPK indirectly. These compounds are usually contained in mixtures with a variety of structurally different other compounds, which in turn can also alter the activity of AMPK via one or more pathways. For these compounds, experiments are complicated, since the required pure substances are often not yet isolated and/or therefore not sufficiently available. Therefore, our goal was to develop a screening tool that could handle the profound heterogeneity in activation pathways of the AMPK. Since machine learning algorithms can model complex (unknown) relationships and patterns, some of these methods (random forest, support vector machines, stochastic gradient boosting, logistic regression, and deep neural network) were applied and validated using a database, comprising of 904 activating and 799 neutral or inhibiting compounds identified by extensive PubMed literature search and PubChem Bioassay database. All models showed unexpectedly high classification accuracy in training, but more importantly in predicting the unseen test data. These models are therefore suitable tools for rapid in silico screening of established substances or multicomponent mixtures and can be used to identify compounds of interest for further testing.

Highlights

  • The adenosine monophosphate (AMP) activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a master role in regulating cellular metabolism [1]

  • The controls appeared to be mainly distributed in the center of the plot, while activators were preferentially distributed in the periphery, indicating different clusters (Figure 1)

  • The chemical characterization of activators and inhibitors was done according to suggestions by Sharma and Kumar [14], who described groups of chemical compounds that were frequently associated with AMPK activation in the literature (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The adenosine monophosphate (AMP) activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a master role in regulating cellular metabolism [1]. AMPK adapts cellular metabolism and cell growth to the supply of energy at two levels: At the central level, its hypothalamic activity is regarded as the key negative regulator of sympathetically activated thermogenesis, integrating different peripheral hormonal signals as well as drugs such as thyroid hormone, estrogens, and metabolites with different hypothalamic networks and food signals [4,5,6,7]. AMPK senses the loss of cellular energy as an increasing AMP/ATP ratio. AMPK is activated and in turn activates catabolic pathways, improves cellular glucose uptake, and inhibits anabolic reactions [3]

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