| Literature DB >> 28557712 |
Shannon M Bell1, Jason Phillips2, Alexander Sedykh2, Arpit Tandon2, Catherine Sprankle1, Stephen Q Morefield1, Andy Shapiro3, David Allen1, Ruchir Shah2, Elizabeth A Maull4, Warren M Casey4, Nicole C Kleinstreuer4.
Abstract
SUMMARY: Access to high-quality reference data is essential for the development, validation, and implementation of in vitro and in silico approaches that reduce and replace the use of animals in toxicity testing. Currently, these data must often be pooled from a variety of disparate sources to efficiently link a set of assay responses and model predictions to an outcome or hazard classification. To provide a central access point for these purposes, the National Toxicology Program Interagency Center for the Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological Methods developed the Integrated Chemical Environment (ICE) web resource. The ICE data integrator allows users to retrieve and combine data sets and to develop hypotheses through data exploration. Open-source computational workflows and models will be available for download and application to local data. ICE currently includes curated in vivo test data, reference chemical information, in vitro assay data (including Tox21TM/ToxCast™ high-throughput screening data), and in silico model predictions. Users can query these data collections focusing on end points of interest such as acute systemic toxicity, endocrine disruption, skin sensitization, and many others. ICE is publicly accessible at https://ice.ntp.niehs.nih.gov. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP1759.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28557712 PMCID: PMC5644972 DOI: 10.1289/EHP1759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Data types included in 2017 ICE releases and example end points.
| Data types | Availability | Type | End point examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute dermal toxicity | October 2017 (tentative) | Rodent LD50 | |
| Acute inhalation toxicity | October 2017 (tentative) | Rodent LC50 | |
| Acute oral toxicity | March 2017 | Rodent LD50 | |
| Acute oral toxicity | March 2017 | Basal cytotoxicity IC50 | |
| Androgenic activity | March 2017 | Androgen receptor binding and transactivation (agonist and antagonist activity) | |
| Androgenic activity | July 2017 (tentative) | Lowest effect level in the rodent Hershberger assay | |
| Androgenic activity | March 2017 | Androgen receptor pathway model scores | |
| Curated HTS | March 2017 | Assay ACC, AC50 | |
| Dermal irritation | March 2017 | Skin irritation/corrosion classification categories | |
| Dermal sensitization | March 2017 | Mouse LLNA EC3 and human patch test lowest effect level | |
| Dermal sensitization | March 2017 | KeratinoSens™, DPRA, hCLAT assay results | |
| Dermal sensitization | July 2017 (tentative) | Binary sensitizer/nonsensitizer call | |
| Estrogenic activity | March 2017 | Lowest effect level in the rodent uterotrophic assay | |
| Estrogenic activity | March 2017 | Estrogen receptor pathway model scores | |
| Ocular irritation | March 2017 | Eye irritation/corrosion classification categories | |
| Physicochemical property predictions | March 2017 | LogP, logVP, logBCF, logS, melting point, boiling point |
Notes: AC50, concentration that increases activity by 50%; ACC, activity concentration at cutoff, a measure of the activity threshold for an assay response based on curve-fitting models; EC3, in the LLNA, a test chemical concentration that produces a stimulation index of 3; hCLAT, human cell line activation test; IC50, concentration that inhibits activity (in this context, decreases cell viability) by 50%; LC50, inhalation concentration expected to produce lethality in 50% of animals tested; LD50, dose expected to produce lethality in 50% of animals tested; LLNA, local lymph node assay; physicochemical properties characterized as log values are log 10; logBCF, log of the bioconcentration factor; logP, octanol-water partition coefficient; logVP, the vapor pressure; logS, log of the solubility in water.
In vitro data were used to develop a nonanimal method for setting starting doses for in vivo acute oral toxicity studies.
Figure 1.Integrated Chemical Environment (ICE) users, resources, and outcomes. ICE was developed to support three main user roles: method developers, chemical producers, and risk assessors. The center panel lists the resources ICE provides to help these user groups complete some of the major tasks listed in the right panel.