Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.

A major challenge in computational biology is constraining free parameters in mathematical models. Adjusting a parameter to make a given model output more realistic sometimes has unexpected and undesirable effects on other model behaviors. Here, we extend a regression-based method for parameter sens...

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Main Authors: Amrita X Sarkar, Eric A Sobie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-09-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2932676?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-42b66d09dcbe4b93a1920e39fff57e772020-11-25T02:27:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582010-09-0169e100091410.1371/journal.pcbi.1000914Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.Amrita X SarkarEric A SobieA major challenge in computational biology is constraining free parameters in mathematical models. Adjusting a parameter to make a given model output more realistic sometimes has unexpected and undesirable effects on other model behaviors. Here, we extend a regression-based method for parameter sensitivity analysis and show that a straightforward procedure can uniquely define most ionic conductances in a well-known model of the human ventricular myocyte. The model's parameter sensitivity was analyzed by randomizing ionic conductances, running repeated simulations to measure physiological outputs, then collecting the randomized parameters and simulation results as "input" and "output" matrices, respectively. Multivariable regression derived a matrix whose elements indicate how changes in conductances influence model outputs. We show here that if the number of linearly-independent outputs equals the number of inputs, the regression matrix can be inverted. This is significant, because it implies that the inverted matrix can specify the ionic conductances that are required to generate a particular combination of model outputs. Applying this idea to the myocyte model tested, we found that most ionic conductances could be specified with precision (R(2) > 0.77 for 12 out of 16 parameters). We also applied this method to a test case of changes in electrophysiology caused by heart failure and found that changes in most parameters could be well predicted. We complemented our findings using a Bayesian approach to demonstrate that model parameters cannot be specified using limited outputs, but they can be successfully constrained if multiple outputs are considered. Our results place on a solid mathematical footing the intuition-based procedure simultaneously matching a model's output to several data sets. More generally, this method shows promise as a tool to define model parameters, in electrophysiology and in other biological fields.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2932676?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amrita X Sarkar
Eric A Sobie
spellingShingle Amrita X Sarkar
Eric A Sobie
Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Amrita X Sarkar
Eric A Sobie
author_sort Amrita X Sarkar
title Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
title_short Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
title_full Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
title_fullStr Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
title_full_unstemmed Regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
title_sort regression analysis for constraining free parameters in electrophysiological models of cardiac cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2010-09-01
description A major challenge in computational biology is constraining free parameters in mathematical models. Adjusting a parameter to make a given model output more realistic sometimes has unexpected and undesirable effects on other model behaviors. Here, we extend a regression-based method for parameter sensitivity analysis and show that a straightforward procedure can uniquely define most ionic conductances in a well-known model of the human ventricular myocyte. The model's parameter sensitivity was analyzed by randomizing ionic conductances, running repeated simulations to measure physiological outputs, then collecting the randomized parameters and simulation results as "input" and "output" matrices, respectively. Multivariable regression derived a matrix whose elements indicate how changes in conductances influence model outputs. We show here that if the number of linearly-independent outputs equals the number of inputs, the regression matrix can be inverted. This is significant, because it implies that the inverted matrix can specify the ionic conductances that are required to generate a particular combination of model outputs. Applying this idea to the myocyte model tested, we found that most ionic conductances could be specified with precision (R(2) > 0.77 for 12 out of 16 parameters). We also applied this method to a test case of changes in electrophysiology caused by heart failure and found that changes in most parameters could be well predicted. We complemented our findings using a Bayesian approach to demonstrate that model parameters cannot be specified using limited outputs, but they can be successfully constrained if multiple outputs are considered. Our results place on a solid mathematical footing the intuition-based procedure simultaneously matching a model's output to several data sets. More generally, this method shows promise as a tool to define model parameters, in electrophysiology and in other biological fields.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2932676?pdf=render
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