The influence of modes of action and physicochemical properties of chemicals on the correlation between in vitro and acute fish toxicity data
New EU legislation is providing an impetus for research aimed at replacing acute fish toxicity testing with in vitro alternatives. In line with such research, the objective of this study was to determine what factors influence the correlation between in vitro and fish toxicity data. Basal cytotoxici...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Toxicology in vitro 2009-10, Vol.23 (7), p.1372-1379 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | New EU legislation is providing an impetus for research aimed at replacing acute fish toxicity testing with
in vitro alternatives. In line with such research, the objective of this study was to determine what factors influence the correlation between
in vitro and fish toxicity data. Basal cytotoxicity (IC
50) and acute toxicity data from fathead minnow (LC
50) of 82 industrial organic chemicals were obtained from the Halle Registry of Cytotoxicity and the US EPA Fathead Minnow Database. A good correlation between IC
50 with LC
50 data was found (
r 0.84). Yet, IC
50 data were less sensitive than LC
50 data by an order of magnitude. Using multiple regression analysis, the octanol–water partition coefficient (
K
OW
) and the Henry’s Law Constant (
H) were found to significantly explain the low absolute sensitivity. The mode of action (MOA) of the chemical was found to significantly explain the general variation in the log
IC
50/log
LC
50 regression line. These results support the notion that (a) the bioavailability of hydrophobic (high
K
OW
) and volatile (high
H) chemicals is significantly lower in
in vitro assays than in the fish bioassay and (b) multiple cell types and endpoints should be included to mimic the modes of action possible in the whole organism. |
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ISSN: | 0887-2333 1879-3177 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.tiv.2009.07.029 |