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Endocrine Abstracts (2024) 104 P190 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.104.P190

SFEIES24 Poster Presentations Reproductive Endocrinology (15 abstracts)

Leveraging genomic-based machine learning to discover bioactive molecules that alleviate symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome

Ayomide Olabode 1 , Simon Hanassab 2 , Joshua Southern 3 , Chioma Izzi-Engbeaya 1 , Thomas Heinis 3 , Ali Abbara 2 , Kirill Veselkov 4 & Waljit Dhillo 2


1Imperial College London, School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom; 2Imperial College London, Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, London, United Kingdom; 3Imperial College London, Department of Computing, London, United Kingdom; 4Imperial College London, Department of Surgery and Cancer, London, United Kingdom


The pathophysiology of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) is multifactorial, therefore discovering effective treatments is challenging. Bioactive food molecules are a potential avenue for PCOS treatment; however, they often lack robust evidence. Applying machine learning (ML) to a genomic dataset may provide accelerated discovery of molecules and drugs that potentially alleviate symptoms through interactions with PCOS-related genes. 17,600 genes, 2,100 bioactive molecules found in foods, and 1,508 clinically available drugs were collected from open-source datasets. 13 genes associated with PCOS (AMH, AMHR2, AR, FSHR, GNRHR, CYP21A2, LMNA, INSR, DNAH11, BMP15, GDF9, LHB, DLK1) were considered as targets to determine the interactivity between PCOS and identified molecules. A higher ranking implied greater interaction between pathways associated with target genes and bioactive molecules (or drugs). Fisher’s exact test assessed whether the molecule rankings were better than a random baseline. Findings were validated using prior literature regarding molecules, foods, or drugs identified to significantly improve PCOS symptoms in women. A higher proportion of beneficial targets were in the top 10 compared to the bottom 10 of 2,100 molecules (P = 0.0031). Of the top 10, isoflavones were predicted to interact with AR and reported to possess antiandrogenic properties. Furthermore, levoglutamide and anthocyanidins demonstrated anti-inflammatory properties in animal studies. Newly identified molecules included epicatechin-3-gallate (found in green tea) and 24-methylenecycloartan-3-ol (a triterpenoid found in almonds), recognised to reduce androgens and inflammation. The identified pharmacological agents in the top three drug classes acted on GNRHR, AR, and INSR, which are known to be important in the pathophysiology of PCOS, thus validating the reliability of the algorithm. Our findings show scope in rapid hypothesis generation for nutritional interventions, or clinical drug repurposing, targeted at PCOS. This ML pipeline can be utilised in other polygenic reproductive and/or metabolic disorders to aid in the identification of novel targets.

Volume 104

Joint Irish-UK Endocrine Meeting 2024

Belfast, Northern Ireland
14 Oct 2024 - 15 Oct 2024

Society for Endocrinology 

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