Title of article :
Cardioprotection Effects of Sevoflurane by Regulating the Pathway of Neuroactive Ligand-Receptor Interaction in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery
Author/Authors :
Wang, Jinquan Department of Anesthesiology - Southwest Hospital - Chongqing, China , Cheng, Jian Department of Anesthesiology - The People’s Hospital of Bishan County - Chongqing, China , Zhang, Chao Department of Anesthesiology - Southwest Hospital - Chongqing, China , Li, Xiaojun Department of Anesthesiology - Southwest Hospital - Chongqing, China
Abstract :
This study was designed to identify attractor modules and further reveal the potential biological processes involving in sevofluraneinduced anesthesia in patients treated with coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Microarray profile data (ID: E-GEOD4386) on atrial samples obtained from patients receiving anesthetic gas sevoflurane prior to and following CABG procedure were
downloaded from EMBL-EBI database for further analysis. Protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks of baseline and sevoflurane
groups were inferred and reweighted according to Spearman correlation coefficient (SCC), followed by systematic modules
inference using clique-merging approach. Subsequently, attract method was utilized to explore attractor modules. Finally, pathway
enrichment analyses for genes in the attractor modules were implemented to illuminate the biological processes in sevoflurane
group. Using clique-merging approach, 27 and 36 modules were obtained from the PPI networks of baseline and sevoflurane-treated
samples, respectively. By comparing with the baseline condition, 5 module pairs with the same gene composition were identified.
Subsequently, 1 out of 5 modules was identified as an attractor based on attract method. Additionally, pathway analysis indicated
that genes in the attractor module were associated with neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction. Accordingly, sevoflurane might
exert important functions in cardioprotection in patients following CABG, partially through regulating the pathway of neuroactive
ligand-receptor interaction.
Keywords :
Ligand-Receptor , CABG , Bypass , Coronary
Journal title :
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine