Multi-Modal Deep Learning Integrates Spatial Topologies and Sequential Motifs to Identify Class I HDAC Inhibitors as Pan-Cancer Therapeutics

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Multi-Modal Deep Learning Integrates Spatial Topologies and Sequential Motifs to Identify Class I HDAC Inhibitors as Pan-Cancer Therapeutics

Authors

Tong, S.; Zhang, W.; Ji, S.

Abstract

The molecular characterization of human solid growths has introduced immense genomic complexity and intra-tumoral diversification. Converting these detailed, multi-omic profiles right into workable, broad-spectrum therapeutics continues to be an awesome traffic jam in accuracy oncology. Traditional computational drug repurposing strategies largely rely on single-modality chemical descriptors, which frequently fail to capture the systemic transcriptomic interactions within the highly dynamic tumor microenvironment. Here, this study presents a robust multi-modal deep learning framework that synergistically integrates two-dimensional (2D) molecular graphs via Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) and chemical functional group patterns via self-attention Transformers. By mapping this dual-stream chemical feature space to the perturbational transcriptomic signatures (LINCS L1000) of 22 distinct cancer types from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), a vast library of over 28,000 small-molecule compounds was computationally screened. of over 28,000 small-molecule compounds. The developed multi-modal architecture achieved state-of-the-art predictive accuracy, significantly outperforming traditional single-modality baseline models. Strikingly, our comprehensive pan-cancer transcriptomic reversal landscape identified a persistent convergence of non-oncology drugs exhibiting potent broad-spectrum anti-tumor potential. Specifically, Class I Histone Deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors most notably TC-H-106, RG2833, and Tianeptinaline, agents originally developed to penetrate the blood-brain barrier for neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorderse- merged as top therapeutic candidates across lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), bladder urothelial carcinoma (BLCA), and rectum adenocarcinoma (READ). Subsequent high-dimensional network pharmacology and functional enrichment analyses confirmed that these agents robustly suppress essential oncogenic pathways, specifically collapsing the G1/S phase transition and DNA damage repair machineries. Furthermore, structural validation via molecular docking and force-field thermodynamics confirmed the highly stable physical binding affinity (Vina score: -7.0 kcal/mol, MMFF94 Energy: 64.76 kcal/mol) of TC-H-106 to the HDAC1 catalytic pocket. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis based on TCGA gene expression stratification underscored the significant prognostic benefit of targeting this epigenetic axis. Collectively, these findings introduce a powerful multi-modal AI framework for systems-level drug repurposing and highlight brain-penetrant Class I HDAC inhibitors as highly promising candidates for pan-cancer epigenetic therapy.

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