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The Power of Resolution: Contextualized Understanding of Biological Responses to Liver Injury Chemicals Using High-throughput Transcriptomics and Benchmark Concentration Modeling
- Source :
- Toxicol Sci
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Prediction of human response to chemical exposures is a major challenge in both pharmaceutical and toxicological research. Transcriptomics has been a powerful tool to explore chemical-biological interactions, however, limited throughput, high-costs, and complexity of transcriptomic interpretations have yielded numerous studies lacking sufficient experimental context for predictive application. To address these challenges, we have utilized a novel high-throughput transcriptomics (HTT) platform, TempO-Seq, to apply the interpretive power of concentration-response modeling with exposures to 24 reference compounds in both differentiated and non-differentiated human HepaRG cell cultures. Our goals were to (1) explore transcriptomic characteristics distinguishing liver injury compounds, (2) assess impacts of differentiation state of HepaRG cells on baseline and compound-induced responses (eg, metabolically-activated), and (3) identify and resolve reference biological-response pathways through benchmark concentration (BMC) modeling. Study data revealed the predictive utility of this approach to identify human liver injury compounds by their respective BMCs in relation to human internal exposure plasma concentrations, and effectively distinguished drug analogs with varied associations of human liver injury (eg, withdrawn therapeutics trovafloxacin and troglitazone). Impacts of cellular differentiation state (proliferated vs differentiated) were revealed on baseline drug metabolizing enzyme expression, hepatic receptor signaling, and responsiveness to metabolically-activated toxicants (eg, cyclophosphamide, benzo(a)pyrene, and aflatoxin B1). Finally, concentration-response modeling enabled efficient identification and resolution of plausibly-relevant biological-response pathways through their respective pathway-level BMCs. Taken together, these findings revealed HTT paired with differentiated in vitro liver models as an effective tool to model, explore, and interpret toxicological and pharmacological interactions.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Drug
Aflatoxin B1
media_common.quotation_subject
Cellular differentiation
Context (language use)
Computational biology
Biology
Toxicology
Transcriptome
Activation, Metabolic
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
medicine
Benzo(a)pyrene
Humans
media_common
Liver injury
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Troglitazone
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
medicine.disease
In vitro
Benchmarking
030104 developmental biology
Hepatocytes
High-Throughput Transcriptomics and Chemical-Induced Liver Injury
Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury
Toxicogenomics
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10960929
- Volume :
- 169
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b67345ea3487c9bc735323e6f9f5ad3d