4.5 Article

Impact of Environmental Chemicals on Key Transcription Regulators and Correlation to Toxicity End Points within EPA's ToxCast Program

Journal

CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 578-590

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/tx900325g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPA/University of North Carolina Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Cooperative Training [CR83323601]
  2. U.S. National Institutes of Health [1R43CA101636, 1R43CA101271, UO1AI061360]
  3. United States Environmental Protection Agency through its Office of Research and Development

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Exposure to environmental chemicals adds to the burden of disease in humans and wildlife to a degree that is difficult to estimate and, thus, mitigate. The ability to assess the impact of existing chemicals for which little to no toxicity data are available or to foresee such effects during early stages of chemical development and use, and before potential exposure occurs, is a pressing need. However, the capacity of the current toxicity evaluation approaches to meet this demand is limited by low throughput and high costs. In the context of EPA's ToxCast project, we have evaluated a novel cellular biosensor system (Factorial(1)) that enables rapid, high-content assessment of a compound's impact on gene regulatory networks. The Factorial biosensors combined libraries of cis- and traps-regulated transcription factor reporter constructs with a highly homogeneous method of detection enabling simultaneous evaluation of multiplexed transcription factor activities. Here, we demonstrate the application of the technology toward determining bioactivity profiles by quantitatively evaluating the effects of 309 environmental chemicals on 25 nuclear receptors and 48 transcription factor response elements. We demonstrate coherent transcription factor activity across nuclear receptors and their response elements and that Nrf2 activity, a marker of oxidative stress, is highly correlated to the overall promiscuity of a chemical. Additionally, as part of the ToxCast program, we identify molecular targets that associate with in vivo end points and represent modes of action that can serve as potential toxicity pathway biomarkers and inputs for predictive modeling of in vivo toxicity.

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