posted on 2019-08-15, 14:07authored byMeysam Tavakoli, Konstantinos Tsekouras, Richard Day, Kenneth W. Dunn, Steve Pressé
The
liver performs critical physiological functions, including
metabolizing and removing substances, such as toxins and drugs, from
the bloodstream. Hepatotoxicity itself is intimately linked to abnormal
hepatic transport, and hepatotoxicity remains the primary reason drugs
in development fail and approved drugs are withdrawn from the market.
For this reason, we propose to analyze, across liver compartments,
the transport kinetics of fluoresceina fluorescent marker
used as a proxy for drug moleculesusing intravital microscopy
data. To resolve the transport kinetics quantitatively from fluorescence
data, we account for the effect that different liver compartments
(with different chemical properties) have on fluorescein’s
emission rate. To do so, we develop ordinary differential equation
transport models from the data where the kinetics is related to the
observable fluorescence levels by “measurement parameters”
that vary across different liver compartments. On account of the steep
non-linearities in the kinetics and stochasticity inherent to the
model, we infer kinetic and measurement parameters by generalizing
the method of parameter cascades. For this application, the method
of parameter cascades ensures fast and precise parameter estimates
from noisy time traces.