• Drug-target binding quantitatively predicts optimal antibiotic dose levels in quinolones 

      Clarelli, Fabrizio; Palmer, Adam; Singh, Bhupender; Storflor, Merete; Lauksund, Silje; Cohen, Ted; Abel, Sören; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2020-08-14)
      Antibiotic resistance is rising and we urgently need to gain a better quantitative understanding of how antibiotics act, which in turn would also speed up the development of new antibiotics. Here, we describe a computational model (COMBAT-COmputational Model of Bacterial Antibiotic Target-binding) that can quantitatively predict antibiotic dose-response relationships. Our goal is dual: We address a ...
    • Mechanisms of antibiotic action shape the fitness landscapes of resistance mutations 

      Hemez, Colin; Clarelli, Fabrizio; Palmer, Adam C.; Bleis, Christina; Abel, Sören; Chindelevitch, Leonid; Cohen, Theodore; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2022-08-24)
      Antibiotic-resistant pathogens are a major public health threat. A deeper understanding of how an antibiotic’s mechanism of action influences the emergence of resistance would aid in the design of new drugs and help to preserve the effectiveness of existing ones. To this end, we developed a model that links bacterial population dynamics with antibiotic-target binding kinetics. Our approach allows ...
    • Multi-scale modeling of drug binding kinetics to predict drug efficacy 

      Clarelli, Fabrizio; Liang, Jingyi; Martinecz, Antal; Heiland, Ines; Wiesch, Pia Abel Zur (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-25)
      Optimizing drug therapies for any disease requires a solid understanding of pharmacokinetics (the drug concentration at a given time point in different body compartments) and pharmacodynamics (the effect a drug has at a given concentration). Mathematical models are frequently used to infer drug concentrations over time based on infrequent sampling and/or in inaccessible body compartments. Models are ...
    • Multi-scale modeling of drug binding kinetics to predict drug efficacy 

      Clarelli, Fabrizio; Liang, Jingyi; Martinecz, Antal; Heiland, Ines; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-25)
      Optimizing drug therapies for any disease requires a solid understanding of pharmacokinetics (the drug concentration at a given time point in different body compartments) and pharmacodynamics (the effect a drug has at a given concentration). Mathematical models are frequently used to infer drug concentrations over time based on infrequent sampling and/or in inaccessible body compartments. Models are ...
    • Reaction Kinetic Models of Antibiotic Heteroresistance 

      Martinecz, Antal; Clarelli, Fabrizio; Abel, Sören; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2019-08-15)
      Bacterial heteroresistance (i.e., the co-existence of several subpopulations with different antibiotic susceptibilities) can delay the clearance of bacteria even with long antibiotic exposure. Some proposed mechanisms have been successfully described with mathematical models of drug-target binding where the mechanism’s downstream of drug-target binding are not explicitly modeled and subsumed in ...
    • Reconstruction of a nonlinear heat transfer law from uncomplete boundary data by means of infrared thermography 

      Clarelli, Fabrizio; Inglese, Gabriele (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2016-10-07)
      Heat exchange between a conducting plate and the environment is described here by means of an unknown nonlinear function F of the temperature u. In this paper we construct a method for recovering F by means of polynomial expansion, perturbation theory and the toolbox of thermal inverse problems. We test our method on two examples: In the first one, we heat the plate (initially at 20 °C) from ...
    • Using chemical reaction kinetics to predict optimal antibiotic treatment strategies 

      Abel zur Wiesch, Pia; Clarelli, Fabrizio; Cohen, Ted (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2017-01-06)
      Identifying optimal dosing of antibiotics has proven challenging—some antibiotics are most effective when they are administered periodically at high doses, while others work best when minimizing concentration fluctuations. Mechanistic explanations for why antibiotics differ in their optimal dosing are lacking, limiting our ability to predict optimal therapy and leading to long and costly experiments. ...
    • vCOMBAT: a novel tool to create and visualize a computational model of bacterial antibiotic target-binding 

      Tran, Vi Ngoc-Nha; Shams, Alireza; Ascioglu, Sinan; Martinecz, Antal; Liang, Jingyi; Clarelli, Fabrizio; Mostowy, Rafal; Cohen, Ted; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2022-01-06)
      Background: As antibiotic resistance creates a signifcant global health threat, we need not only to accelerate the development of novel antibiotics but also to develop better treatment strategies using existing drugs to improve their efcacy and prevent the selection of further resistance. We require new tools to rationally design dosing regimens from data collected in early phases of antibiotic ...