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Toxicological Knowledge Base (a Definition)

Toxicological Knowledge Base (a Definition).

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Toxicological Knowledge Base (a Definition)

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  1. Toxicological Knowledge Base (a Definition) “An in computeroaggregated set of the most germane literature citations and biological activity datasets, together with computational models which correlate those activities with chemical structure, and, ultimately, models for risk assessment.” Response Structure Dose Correlation Activity

  2. A circular process provides training sets DESIGNED to produce robust, living predictive models Data in scientific papers Validation: 1. Cross-validation 2. Testset challenge Develop Models EDKB Data validation and selection Diversity analysis Training set design New Data Needs & Research Hypothesis NCTR/EPA Experiments

  3. EDKB OBJECTIVES • Develop and validate predictive computational models for ER and AR by: • developing appropriate data sets to train models • examining a wide variety of models for performance and ease of use • validating models by: • internal validation • external validation from non-randomly selected chemicals • external validation from randomly selected chemicals from the 58,000 chemical EPSD

  4. Dataset Criteria for Development of SAR models • Develop training data set by design for • structurally diverse chemical structures • a wide range of binding values (RBAs)

  5. Status of ER Models • 238 chemicals assayed (duplicate tubes; two replicates) over a six log RBA range • Techniques developed for identification of potential binders by EDKB team • Filters (Phase I) and 11 categorical SAR models (Phase II) finished • Models validated against literature datasets

  6. Status of ER Models (2) • Models biased toward false positives to minimize false negatives • RBA predictions made for all 58,000 chemicals “in play” • Handout of ER model publications • ~ First two years-used literature RBAs • Subsequently used NCTR dataset

  7. Androgen Receptor Competitive Binding Assay Two assays evaluated: • Ventral prostate from castrated adults • Could not obtain reproducible results • PanVera androgen binding domain • Good saturation and competitive binding results • Assay subsequently validated for use • Less expensive than ventral prostate • Uses no animals

  8. Validation of PanVera Assay • PanVera protein was diluted to several low concentrations and saturation assays were conducted with [3H]-R1881. • Protein concentrations selected were in the range of the reported KD. • A protein concentration in the stable KD range was used for subsequent competitive binding assays.

  9. AR Competitive Binding Results for Steroidal Androgens

  10. AR Competitive Binding Results for Some Steroidal Estrogens

  11. AR Competitive Binding Results for Antiestrogens

  12. Status of AR Assay Up to May 9, 2001, 134 compounds were tested. To date,196 compounds have been tested Number of Chemicals

  13. Activity Distribution for AR Number of Chemicals

  14. Comparison of NCTR Assay with EPA Assay

  15. Primary Pharmacophore Model

  16. CoMFA Model

  17. De novo external validation of assays and models • EPA funded $850K contract with Batelle Northwest for validation and comparison performance of NCTR and EPA assays and models • Assays methods include: • uterine cytosol for ER (EPA and NCTR assays are similar) • prostate assay for AR (EPA) • PanVera assay for AR (NCTR)

  18. EDKB EXTERNAL FUNDING • SOURCE AMOUNT ($) • FDA OWH 1 185,000 • FDA OWH 2 325,000 • CMA CRADA 2 420,000 • EPA GRANT 1 425,000 • EPA IAG 32,000,000 • TOTAL 3,355,000 • 1 Experimental collaboration with U Missouri • 2 Two separate awards • 3 $500,000 for FY 2001; $1,500,000 for FY 2002-2005

  19. What did the Buddhist say to the hot dog vendor?

  20. Make me one with everything

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