Publications by authors named "Nadege Piclin"

Background: The new European Regulation on chemical safety, REACH, (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of CHemical substances), is in the process of being implemented. Many chemicals used in industry require additional testing to comply with the REACH regulations. At the same time EU member states are attempting to reduce the number of animals used in experiments under the 3 Rs policy, (refining, reducing, and replacing the use of animals in laboratory procedures).

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Background: The new REACH legislation requires assessment of a large number of chemicals in the European market for several endpoints. Developmental toxicity is one of the most difficult endpoints to assess, on account of the complexity, length and costs of experiments. Following the encouragement of QSAR (in silico) methods provided in the REACH itself, the CAESAR project has developed several models.

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An Adaptive Fuzzy Partition (AFP) algorithm, derived from Fuzzy Logic concepts, was used to classify an anticancer data set, including about 1300 compounds subdivided into eight mechanisms of action. AFP classification builds relationships between molecular descriptors and bio-activities by dynamically dividing the descriptor hyperspace into a set of fuzzy subspaces. These subspaces are described by simple linguistic rules, from which scores ranging between 0 and 1 can be derived.

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An adaptive fuzzy partition (AFP) algorithm was applied on two bioavailability data sets subdivided into four ranges of activity. A large set of molecular descriptors was tested and the most relevant parameters were selected with help of a procedure based on genetic algorithm concepts and stepwise method. After building several AFP models on a training set, the best ones were able to predict correctly 75% of the validation set compounds.

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A data set of 235 pesticide compounds, divided into three classes according to their toxicity toward rats, was analyzed by a fuzzy logic procedure called adaptive fuzzy partition (AFP). This method allows the establishment of molecular descriptor/chemical activity relationships by dynamically dividing the descriptor space into a set of fuzzily partitioned subspaces. A set of 153 molecular descriptors was analyzed, including topological, physicochemical, quantum mechanical, constitutional, and electronic parameters, and the most relevant descriptors were selected with the help of a procedure combining genetic algorithm concepts and a stepwise method.

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