4.8 Article

Construction of an In Silico Structural Profiling Tool Facilitating Mechanistically Grounded Classification of Aquatic Toxicants

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 24, Pages 17805-17814

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c03736

Keywords

toxicity prediction; aquatic; chemical structure; environmental species; classification; mechanism of action

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The performance of chemical safety assessment in environmental toxicology is often hindered by a lack of experimental data. A new system developed by Sapounidou aims to classify substances based on molecular initiating events. The primary goal of this study was to create a computational workflow and evaluate its coverage of chemical space.
The performance of chemical safety assessment within the domain of environmental toxicology is often impeded by a shortfall of appropriate experimental data describing potential hazards across the many compounds in regular industrial use. In silico schemes for assigning aquatic-relevant modes or mechanisms of toxic action to substances, based solely on consideration of chemical structure, have seen widespread employment-including those of Verhaar, Russom, and later Bauer (MechoA). Recently, development of a further system was reported by Sapounidou, which, in common with MechoA, seeks to ground its classifications in understanding and appreciation of molecular initiating events. Until now, this Sapounidou scheme has not seen implementation as a tool for practical screening use. Accordingly, the primary purpose of this study was to create such a resource-in the form of a computational workflow. This exercise was facilitated through the formulation of 183 structural alerts/rules describing molecular features associated with narcosis, chemical reactivity, and specific mechanisms of action. Output was subsequently compared relative to that of the three aforementioned alternative systems to identify strengths and shortcomings as regards coverage of chemical space.

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