10 research outputs found

    Multi-omics bioactivity profile-based chemical grouping and read-across:a case study with Daphnia magna and azo dyes

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    Grouping/read-across is widely used for predicting the toxicity of data-poor target substance(s) using data-rich source substance(s). While the chemical industry and the regulators recognise its benefits, registration dossiers are often rejected due to weak analogue/category justifications based largely on the structural similarity of source and target substances. Here we demonstrate how multi-omics measurements can improve confidence in grouping via a statistical assessment of the similarity of molecular effects. Six azo dyes provided a pool of potential source substances to predict long-term toxicity to aquatic invertebrates (Daphnia magna) for the dye Disperse Yellow 3 (DY3) as the target substance. First, we assessed the structural similarities of the dyes, generating a grouping hypothesis with DY3 and two Sudan dyes within one group. Daphnia magna were exposed acutely to equi-effective doses of all seven dyes (each at 3 doses and 3 time points), transcriptomics and metabolomics data were generated from 760 samples. Multi-omics bioactivity profile-based grouping uniquely revealed that Sudan 1 (S1) is the most suitable analogue for read-across to DY3. Mapping ToxPrint structural fingerprints of the dyes onto the bioactivity profile-based grouping indicated an aromatic alcohol moiety could be responsible for this bioactivity similarity. The long-term reproductive toxicity to aquatic invertebrates of DY3 was predicted from S1 (21-day NOEC, 40 µg/L). This prediction was confirmed experimentally by measuring the toxicity of DY3 in D. magna. While limitations of this ‘omics approach are identified, the study illustrates an effective statistical approach for building chemical groups

    Developing and applying state of the art molecular technologies to discover mechanism of ZnO nanoparticle perturbation in Daphnia-algae chemical signal transfer system

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    In light of rapid industrial progress of the 21st century, the number of chemicals, including nanomaterials, used on a daily basis and introduced into the environment is constantly increasing. Far less chemicals, however, undergo appropriate risk assessment procedures, to ensure that they are not toxic or hazardous. Therefore, there is a necessity for new high-throughput techniques and tools in order to boost risk assessment. In this study it was attempted to develop a novel risk assessment paradigm, incorporating automated sample preparation for metabolomics toxicity testing, multi-trophic level ZnO nanoparticle (NP) toxicity assessment and an adverse outcome pathway (AOP) in Daphnia-algae information transfer system. In order to enhance metabolomics toxicity screening, several extraction solvent systems were tested (using direct infusion mass spectrometry (DIMS) and liquid chromatography (LC)-MS), ultimately selecting more robotics-compatible Bligh and Dyer method for further automation (even though modified Matyash method provided higher yield and reproducibility [1]). The low-mass tissue (Daphnia) extraction employing Biomek NXp platform was then automated (and assessed) to be integrated with existing high-throughput DIMS into the metabolomics pipeline. The optimised method was capable of a fully-automated extraction for polar and non-polar metabolites (24 Daphnia samples per batch), requiring 90 minutes, with no significant contamination or sample carry-over. Furthermore, multi-trophic toxicity was assessed by studying ZnO NP-induced changes in sulfonated lipids (SLs, participate as kairomones in signalling between Daphnia and algae, inducing defences) and an early molecular mechanism leading to those changes (via multi-omics approach – RNA-seq and LC-MS). It was shown that SLs decrease rapidly after exposure (at 0.3 h) and are not preceded by the changes in sulfur/sulfonation/glutathione metabolism (unlike hypothesized), while the mechanism likely involves activation of TNF/IL1B (tumor necrosis factor/interleukin 1 beta). Ultimately, a putative AOP featuring SL-mediated perturbation in Daphnia and algae (caused by ZnO NPs) was developed to aid the risk assessment of nanomaterials in aquatic food webs, however further research is required to fill in the existing knowledge gaps

    Knowledge-driven approaches to create the MTox700+ metabolite panel for predicting toxicity

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    Endogenous metabolite levels describe the molecular phenotype that is most downstream from chemical exposure. Consequently, quantitative changes in metabolite levels have the potential to predict mode-of-action and adversity, with regulatory toxicology predicated on the latter. However, toxicity-related metabolic biomarker resources remain highly fragmented and incomplete. Although development of the S1500+ gene biomarker panel has accelerated the application of transcriptomics to toxicology, a similar initiative for metabolic biomarkers is lacking. Our aim was to define a publicly available metabolic biomarker panel, equivalent to S1500+, capable of predicting pathway perturbations and/or adverse outcomes. We conducted a systematic review of multiple toxicological resources, yielding 189 proposed metabolic biomarkers from existing assays (BASF, Bowes-44, and Tox21), 342 biomarkers from databases (Adverse Outcome Pathway Wiki, Comparative Toxicogenomics Database, QIAGEN Ingenuity Pathway Analysis, and Toxin and Toxin-Target Database), and 435 biomarkers from the literature. Evidence mapping across all 8 resources generated a panel of 722 metabolic biomarkers for toxicology (MTox700+), of which 462 (64%) are associated with molecular pathways and 575 (80%) with adverse outcomes. Comparing MTox700+ and S1500+ revealed that 418 (58%) metabolic biomarkers associate with pathways shared across both panels, with further metabolites mapping to unique pathways. Metabolite reference standards are commercially available for 646 (90%) of the panel metabolites, and assays exist for 578 (80%) of these biomarkers. This study has generated a publicly available metabolic biomarker panel for toxicology, which through its future laboratory deployment, is intended to help build foundational knowledge to support the generation of molecular mechanistic data for chemical hazard assessment

    Metabolomics Simultaneously Derives Benchmark Dose Estimates and Discovers Metabolic Biotransformations in a Rat Bioassay

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    Benchmark dose (BMD) modeling estimates the dose of a chemical that causes a perturbation from baseline. Transcriptional BMDs have been shown to be relatively consistent with apical end point BMDs, opening the door to using molecular BMDs to derive human health-based guidance values for chemical exposure. Metabolomics measures the responses of small-molecule endogenous metabolites to chemical exposure, complementing transcriptomics by characterizing downstream molecular phenotypes that are more closely associated with apical end points. The aim of this study was to apply BMD modeling to in vivo metabolomics data, to compare metabolic BMDs to both transcriptional and apical end point BMDs. This builds upon our previous application of transcriptomics and BMD modeling to a 5-day rat study of triphenyl phosphate (TPhP), applying metabolomics to the same archived tissues. Specifically, liver from rats exposed to five doses of TPhP was investigated using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy-based metabolomics. Following the application of BMDExpress2 software, 2903 endogenous metabolic features yielded viable dose-response models, confirming a perturbation to the liver metabolome. Metabolic BMD estimates were similarly sensitive to transcriptional BMDs, and more sensitive than both clinical chemistry and apical end point BMDs. Pathway analysis of the multiomics data sets revealed a major effect of TPhP exposure on cholesterol (and downstream) pathways, consistent with clinical chemistry measurements. Additionally, the transcriptomics data indicated that TPhP activated xenobiotic metabolism pathways, which was confirmed by using the underexploited capability of metabolomics to detect xenobiotic-related compounds. Eleven biotransformation products of TPhP were discovered, and their levels were highly correlated with multiple xenobiotic metabolism genes. This work provides a case study showing how metabolomics and transcriptomics can estimate mechanistically anchored points-of-departure. Furthermore, the study demonstrates how metabolomics can also discover biotransformation products, which could be of value within a regulatory setting, for example, as an enhancement of OECD Test Guideline 417 (toxicokinetics).</p

    Metabolomics Simultaneously Derives Benchmark Dose Estimates and Discovers Metabolic Biotransformations in a Rat Bioassay

    No full text
    Benchmark dose (BMD) modeling estimates the dose of a chemical that causes a perturbation from baseline. Transcriptional BMDs have been shown to be relatively consistent with apical end point BMDs, opening the door to using molecular BMDs to derive human health-based guidance values for chemical exposure. Metabolomics measures the responses of small-molecule endogenous metabolites to chemical exposure, complementing transcriptomics by characterizing downstream molecular phenotypes that are more closely associated with apical end points. The aim of this study was to apply BMD modeling to in vivo metabolomics data, to compare metabolic BMDs to both transcriptional and apical end point BMDs. This builds upon our previous application of transcriptomics and BMD modeling to a 5-day rat study of triphenyl phosphate (TPhP), applying metabolomics to the same archived tissues. Specifically, liver from rats exposed to five doses of TPhP was investigated using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy-based metabolomics. Following the application of BMDExpress2 software, 2903 endogenous metabolic features yielded viable dose-response models, confirming a perturbation to the liver metabolome. Metabolic BMD estimates were similarly sensitive to transcriptional BMDs, and more sensitive than both clinical chemistry and apical end point BMDs. Pathway analysis of the multiomics data sets revealed a major effect of TPhP exposure on cholesterol (and downstream) pathways, consistent with clinical chemistry measurements. Additionally, the transcriptomics data indicated that TPhP activated xenobiotic metabolism pathways, which was confirmed by using the underexploited capability of metabolomics to detect xenobiotic-related compounds. Eleven biotransformation products of TPhP were discovered, and their levels were highly correlated with multiple xenobiotic metabolism genes. This work provides a case study showing how metabolomics and transcriptomics can estimate mechanistically anchored points-of-departure. Furthermore, the study demonstrates how metabolomics can also discover biotransformation products, which could be of value within a regulatory setting, for example, as an enhancement of OECD Test Guideline 417 (toxicokinetics).</p
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