Back to Search Start Over

Implementation of Zebrafish Ontologies for Toxicology Screening

Authors :
Anne E. Thessen
Skylar Marvel
J. C. Achenbach
Stephan Fischer
Melissa A. Haendel
Kimberly Hayward
Nils Klüver
Sarah Könemann
Jessica Legradi
Pamela Lein
Connor Leong
J. Erik Mylroie
Stephanie Padilla
Dante Perone
Antonio Planchart
Rafael Miñana Prieto
Arantza Muriana
Celia Quevedo
David Reif
Kristen Ryan
Evelyn Stinckens
Lisa Truong
Lucia Vergauwen
Colette Vom Berg
Mitch Wilbanks
Bianca Yaghoobi
Jon Hamm
Source :
Frontiers in Toxicology, Vol 4 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2022.

Abstract

Toxicological evaluation of chemicals using early-life stage zebrafish (Danio rerio) involves the observation and recording of altered phenotypes. Substantial variability has been observed among researchers in phenotypes reported from similar studies, as well as a lack of consistent data annotation, indicating a need for both terminological and data harmonization. When examined from a data science perspective, many of these apparent differences can be parsed into the same or similar endpoints whose measurements differ only in time, methodology, or nomenclature. Ontological knowledge structures can be leveraged to integrate diverse data sets across terminologies, scales, and modalities. Building on this premise, the National Toxicology Program’s Systematic Evaluation of the Application of Zebrafish in Toxicology undertook a collaborative exercise to evaluate how the application of standardized phenotype terminology improved data consistency. To accomplish this, zebrafish researchers were asked to assess images of zebrafish larvae for morphological malformations in two surveys. In the first survey, researchers were asked to annotate observed malformations using their own terminology. In the second survey, researchers were asked to annotate the images from a list of terms and definitions from the Zebrafish Phenotype Ontology. Analysis of the results suggested that the use of ontology terms increased consistency and decreased ambiguity, but a larger study is needed to confirm. We conclude that utilizing a common data standard will not only reduce the heterogeneity of reported terms but increases agreement and repeatability between different laboratories. Thus, we advocate for the development of a zebrafish phenotype atlas to help laboratories create interoperable, computable data.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26733080
Volume :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Toxicology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.31689544a84557af841ca42ae42ad4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/ftox.2022.817999