A toxicity pathway-oriented approach to develop adverse outcome pathway: AHR activation as a case study

With numerous new chemicals introduced into the environment everyday, identification of their potential hazards to the environment and human health is a considerable challenge. Developing adverse outcome pathway (AOP) framework is promising in helping to achieve this goal as it can bring In Vitro te...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2021-01, Vol.268 (Pt B), p.115733, Article 115733
Hauptverfasser: Jin, Yuan, Feng, Meiyao, Ma, Wanli, Wei, Yanhong, Qi, Guangshuai, Luo, Jiao, Xu, Lin, Li, Xinmei, Li, Chuanhai, Wang, Ying, Li, Daochuan, Chen, Jing, Zhao, Yanjie, Hou, Yufei, Zhao, Qianwen, Jiang, Lidan, Xie, Mengyue, Zheng, Yuxin, Yu, Dianke
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:With numerous new chemicals introduced into the environment everyday, identification of their potential hazards to the environment and human health is a considerable challenge. Developing adverse outcome pathway (AOP) framework is promising in helping to achieve this goal as it can bring In Vitro testing into toxicity measurement and understanding. To explore the toxic mechanism underlying environmental chemicals via the AOP approach, an integration of adequate experimental data with systems biology understanding is preferred. Here, we describe a novel method to develop reliable and sensible AOPs that relies on chemical-gene interactions, toxicity pathways, molecular regulations, phenotypes, and outcomes information obtained from comparative toxicogenomics database (CTD) and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA). Using Benzo(a)pyrene (BaP), a highly studied chemical as a stressor, we identified the pivotal IPA toxicity pathways, the molecular initiating event (MIE), and candidate key events (KEs) to structure AOPs in the liver and lung, respectively. Further, we used the corresponding CTD information of multiple typical AHR-ligands, including 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzoparadioxin (TCDD), valproic acid, quercetin, and particulate matter, to validate our AOP networks. Our approach is likely to speed up AOP development as providing a time- and cost-efficient way to collect all fragmented bioinformation in published studies. It also facilitates a better understanding of the toxic mechanism of environmental chemicals, and potentially brings new insights into the screening of critical paths in the AOP network. [Display omitted] •We constructed the AOPs describing AHR activation-initiated liver/lung toxicity.•We proposed a novel AOP developing method based on toxicity pathways.•Our AOPs provide explicit molecular KEs as potential biomarkers. Adverse outcome pathways for AHR activation-initiated toxicity were structured based on the integration of pivotal toxicity pathways.
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115733