Abstract

BackgroundCurrently, most biomedical models exist in isolation. It is often difficult to reuse or integrate models or their components, in part because they are not modular. Modular components allow the modeler to think more deeply about the role of the model and to more completely address a modeling project’s requirements. In particular, modularity facilitates component reuse and model integration for models with different use cases, including the ability to exchange modules during or between simulations. The heterogeneous nature of biology and vast range of wet-lab experimental platforms call for modular models designed to satisfy a variety of use cases. We argue that software analogs of biological mechanisms are reasonable candidates for modularization. Biomimetic software mechanisms comprised of physiomimetic mechanism modules offer benefits that are unique or especially important to multi-scale, biomedical modeling and simulation.ResultsWe present a general, scientific method of modularizing mechanisms into reusable software components that we call physiomimetic mechanism modules (PMMs). PMMs utilize parametric containers that partition and expose state information into physiologically meaningful groupings. To demonstrate, we modularize four pharmacodynamic response mechanisms adapted from an in silico liver (ISL). We verified the modularization process by showing that drug clearance results from in silico experiments are identical before and after modularization. The modularized ISL achieves validation targets drawn from propranolol outflow profile data. In addition, an in silico hepatocyte culture (ISHC) is created. The ISHC uses the same PMMs and required no refactoring. The ISHC achieves validation targets drawn from propranolol intrinsic clearance data exhibiting considerable between-lab variability. The data used as validation targets for PMMs originate from both in vitro to in vivo experiments exhibiting large fold differences in time scale.ConclusionsThis report demonstrates the feasibility of PMMs and their usefulness across multiple model use cases. The pharmacodynamic response module developed here is robust to changes in model context and flexible in its ability to achieve validation targets in the face of considerable experimental uncertainty. Adopting the modularization methods presented here is expected to facilitate model reuse and integration, thereby accelerating the pace of biomedical research.

Highlights

  • Though the physiomimetic mechanism modules (PMMs) are identical, groundings are relational and free to differ between the in silico liver (ISL) and in silico hepatocyte culture (ISHC), and we demonstrate the value of enabling that freedom

  • We summarize the Java-specific modularization methods applied to the ISL and ISHC by describing the same three key software aspects

  • We present a modularization method that defines analog modules based on referent physiological mechanisms

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Summary

Introduction

It is often difficult to reuse or integrate models or their components, in part because they are not modular. Modularity facilitates component reuse and model integration for models with different use cases, including the ability to exchange modules during or between simulations. Biomimetic software mechanisms comprised of physiomimetic mechanism modules offer benefits that are unique or especially important to multi-scale, biomedical modeling and simulation. In silico modeling and simulation (M&S) can accelerate this process when models are designed for particular use cases. For a scientifically useful model, use cases must be highly specific and explicit, which enables clear specification of requirements. Such models are perpetual works in progress, satisfying various use cases throughout model development. In silico M&S methods are viewed broadly as a promising countermeasure to the recent decline in pharmaceutical R&D productivity [1]

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