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Integrating Adverse Outcome Pathways into the OECD (Q)SAR Application Toolbox T.W. Schultz

Integrating Adverse Outcome Pathways into the OECD (Q)SAR Application Toolbox T.W. Schultz. McKim Workshop on Strategic Approaches for Reducing Data Redundancy in Cancer Assessment Duluth, MN, USA 19 May, 2010. Today’s Discussion. Goal & Problem Categories Mechanism, Modes, & Pathways

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Integrating Adverse Outcome Pathways into the OECD (Q)SAR Application Toolbox T.W. Schultz

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  1. Integrating Adverse Outcome Pathways into the OECD (Q)SAR Application Toolbox T.W. Schultz McKim Workshop on Strategic Approaches for Reducing Data Redundancy in Cancer Assessment Duluth, MN, USA 19 May, 2010

  2. Today’s Discussion • Goal & Problem • Categories • Mechanism, Modes, & Pathways • The Example of Skin Sensitization • Adverse Outcome Pathways • Critical Events & Integrated Testing Strategy • Summary

  3. The Goal • To place every discreet organic chemical in to a category for every hazard endpoint of interest. • Easy for data-rich acute effects. • Hard for data-sparse chronic effects. • With this in mind the concept of outcome pathways is proposed.

  4. The Problem • There is discontinuity between chemical and biological spaces (substances, which are “similar” in molecule structure, are often dissimilar in terms of their toxciity including the ability to elicit a particular hazard endpoint, as well as potency within that endpoint). • We often have difficulty in forming toxicologically meaningful groups, especially for elaborate hazard endpoints such as cancer.

  5. Chemical Category in Toxicity Assessments • Provide a means of evaluating all members for common toxicological behavior or consistent trends among data for an endpoint (measured data on a few category members can be used to estimate the missing values for one or more untested member). • Identification of a consistent pattern of toxic effects within a category increases the confidence in the reliability of the results for all. • This is predicated on a priori binning the chemical in the correct category. • Category formation is a key topic of predictive toxicology.

  6. Toxicologically Meaningful Category (TMC) • The goal is to develop a TMC, which enables a transparent, defensible assessment through mechanistic comparisons without further testing. • This shifts the emphasis to intrinsic chemical activity and critical biological events and away from statistical parameters, especially a fixation on fit and predictivity. • Data for different in vivo endpoints differs so several ways will be needed to form TMCs.

  7. Current Toxicological Categories • Are formed as a result of a common 1) chemical reactivity mechanism, 2) biological mechanism, 3)mode of toxic action (based on receptor, enzyme or basic cellular processes), or 4) molecular similarity • When one moves from a common chemical reactivity-based category to a receptor or common cellular process-based category and even more so to molecular similarity-based category confidence in whether the chemical in question truly belongs to the category diminishes

  8. Chemical Mechanism of Reactivity • Toxicologically related to DNA- and protein-binding. • Directly applicable to a limited number of hazard endpoints where the Molecular Initiating Event (MIE) is the rate limiting factor in the in vivo effect. • Important but not the total answer to forming TMCs.

  9. Mechanism of Toxic Action (MechTA) • In mammalian pharmacology and toxicology literature the MechTA denotes the sequence of events leading from the absorption of an effective dose of a chemical to the specific biological response in the target . • Understanding a chemical’s MechTA requires understanding the causality and temporal relationships between the steps to a particular toxic endpoint, as well as the steps that lead to an effective dose at the biological target(s).

  10. MechTA of Very Limited Value • Meeting this definition of a MechTA requires an exceptionally large amount of high quality data, which only can be attained for a very limited number of compounds. • This is currently out of reach for the vast majority of industrial organic compounds. • One cannot impose the MechTA criteria to forming TMCs and expect to make progressin the near term.

  11. Mode of Toxic Action (ModTA) • Foundation can be traced to the studies of McKim et al. (1987) and their fish acute toxicity syndromes, which are represented by selected biochemical and/or physiological effects of exposureselected as key responses measured in vivo from exposure to model chemicals. • Require less data than MechTA approach. • Successful in forming TMCs for acute aquatic toxicity.

  12. Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) • Designed to describe knowledge concerning the linkages between chemical structure of the target compound and the in vivo outcome of regulatory interest. • The term adverse outcome pathway has been selected so not to cause confusion with the term “Toxicity Pathway” (United States National Research Council in their document entitled “Toxicity Testing in the Twenty-first Century: A Vision and a Strategy”, 2007).

  13. AOP • Facilitates the use of in silico, in chemico, and in vitro (cellular, molecular, and biochemical) endpoints in forecasting in vivo effects. • Assimilates MIEs with measurements of key biological process.

  14. AOP for Allergic Contact Dermatitis 1. Haptenation; 2. Epidermal inflammation & LC activation;3. LC migration; 4. DC: T cell interaction; 5. T cell proliferation; 6. Increase in hapten-specific T cells; 7. Hapten re-exposure; 8. Acute inflammation; 9. T cell-mediated inflammation Karlberg et al.Chem. Res. Toxicol. 2008, 21, 53-69.

  15. Critical Events in an Adverse Outcome Pathway • Events, which are: • Hypothesized in the pathway. • Essential to the induction of the adverse outcome. • Measurable

  16. Integrated Testing Strategy (ITS) • A data generating and data gathering exercise. • Largely focused on in silico, in chemico, and in vitro endpoints. • Selected ITS endpoints must have biological relevance to the hazard endpoint in question, which is most transparent when linked to an AOP.

  17. ITS for Skin Sensitization • Toxicants electrophile or chemicals converted to a reactive metabolite. • Molecular site(s) of actionare nucleophilic sites (cysteine and lysine) in proteins. • MIE is covalent (irreversible) perturbation of dermal proteins. • Biochemical pathsare incompletely known, but includes stimulation of selected cellular responses (e.g., antioxidant-response element).

  18. Patterns in ITS for Skin Sensitization EVENTMEASUREMENT Protein binding in silico predictions from structure Chemical reactivity w/ SH + for TH1, - for TH2 Chemical reactivity w/ NH2 - for TH1, + for TH2 Keratinocyte stimulation of + for TH1, - for TH2 Keap1-Nrf2-ARE cellular Pathway Dendritic cell expression of IL4 - for TH1, + for TH2 Dendritic cell expression of IL8 + for TH1, - for TH2

  19. Summary: Outcome Pathways-1 • The sequence of events from chemical structure through the MIE event to the in vivo outcome. • Designed to avoid mixing data from multiple mechanisms, which can cause the same in vivo outcome. • An organizing principle for hazard assessment, especially for elaborate endpoints.

  20. Summary: Outcome Pathways-2 • Describes a technique for grouping chemicals based on both up-stream chemical and down-stream biological processes. • Shifts emphasis from just intrinsic chemical activity to chemical activity plus the cascade of events that occur across the different levels of biological organization.

  21. Advantages of Outcome Pathways • Allows a shift from animal testing to hypothesis testing. • Provides a basis for chemical extrapolation. • Provides for comparisons across level of biological organization. • Provides for consideration of life form & life stage at exposure. • Provides a basis for species extrapolation.

  22. Molecular Initiating Event Macro -Molecular Interactions Toxicant Chemical Reactivity Profiles Receptor, DNA, Protein Interactions Biological Responses Mechanistic Profiling Current OECD Toolbox

  23. Molecular Initiating Event Biological Responses Macro -Molecular Interactions Toxicant Cellular Organism Organ Population Gene Activation Protein Production Signal Alteration Lethality Sensitization Birth Defect Reproductive Impairment Cancer Chemical Reactivity Profiles Receptor, DNA, Protein Interactions Altered Function Altered Development Structure Extinction Mechanistic Profiling Cellular & In Vitro Testing In Vivo Testing ITS and Adverse Outcome Pathway

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