4.2 Article

AOP report: Development of an adverse outcome pathway for oxidative DNA damage leading to mutations and chromosomal aberrations

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MUTAGENESIS
Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages 118-134

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/em.22479

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC)'s Collaborative Research and Training (CREATE) Program
  2. Health Canada's Genomics Research and Development Initiative

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The Genetic Toxicology Technical Committee is developing adverse outcome pathways that describe modes of action leading to potentially heritable genomic damage. They present an AOP network that links oxidative DNA damage to mutations and chromosomal aberrations. This study identifies knowledge gaps that could be filled by targeted studies and provides building blocks for genotoxicity-associated AOPs.
The Genetic Toxicology Technical Committee (GTTC) of the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI) is developing adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) that describe modes of action leading to potentially heritable genomic damage. The goal was to enhance the use of mechanistic information in genotoxicity assessment by building empirical support for the relationships between relevant molecular initiating events (MIEs) and regulatory endpoints in genetic toxicology. Herein, we present an AOP network that links oxidative DNA damage to two adverse outcomes (AOs): mutations and chromosomal aberrations. We collected empirical evidence from the literature to evaluate the key event relationships between the MIE and the AOs, and assessed the weight of evidence using the modified Bradford-Hill criteria for causality. Oxidative DNA damage is constantly induced and repaired in cells given the ubiquitous presence of reactive oxygen species and free radicals. However, xenobiotic exposures may increase damage above baseline levels through a variety of mechanisms and overwhelm DNA repair and endogenous antioxidant capacity. Unrepaired oxidative DNA base damage can lead to base substitutions during replication and, along with repair intermediates, can also cause DNA strand breaks that can lead to mutations and chromosomal aberrations if not repaired adequately. This AOP network identifies knowledge gaps that could be filled by targeted studies designed to better define the quantitative relationships between key events, which could be leveraged for quantitative chemical safety assessment. We anticipate that this AOP network will provide the building blocks for additional genotoxicity-associated AOPs and aid in designing novel integrated testing approaches for genotoxicity.

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