Evaluation of in vivo and in vitro models of toxicity by comparison of toxicogenomics data with the literature.

Methods

Johannes-Gutenberg University of Mainz, Gresemundweg 2, 55128 Mainz, Germany; Institute of Molecular Biology gGmbH, Ackermannweg 4, 55128 Mainz, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: January 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Toxicity in humans is assessed through both animal studies (in vivo) and cell culture studies (in vitro), with a focus on how chemical substances affect gene expression and histopathology.
  • Toxicogenomics plays a crucial role by collecting and analyzing gene expression data related to various drugs and pollutants, which helps in understanding drug responses on a genomic level.
  • The study proposes evaluating the suitability of different model systems for studying human toxicity by examining how compounds associated with specific toxic effects change gene expression in those models, using a computational approach integrating gene data and literature.

Article Abstract

Toxicity affecting humans is studied by observing the effects of chemical substances in animal organisms (in vivo) or in animal and human cultivated cell lines (in vitro). Toxicogenomics studies collect gene expression profiles and histopathology assessment data for hundreds of drugs and pollutants in standardized experimental designs using different model systems. These data are an invaluable source for analyzing genome-wide drug response in biological systems. However, a problem remains that is how to evaluate the suitability of heterogeneous in vitro and in vivo systems to model the many different aspects of human toxicity. We propose here that a given model system (cell type or animal organ) is supported to appropriately describe a particular aspect of human toxicity if the set of compounds associated in the literature with that aspect of toxicity causes a change in expression of genes with a particular function in the tested model system. This approach provides candidate genes to explain the toxicity effect (the differentially expressed genes) and the compounds whose effect could be modeled (the ones producing both the change of expression in the model system and that are associated with the human phenotype in the literature). Here we present an application of this approach using a computational pipeline that integrates compound-induced gene expression profiles (from the Open TG-GATEs database) and biomedical literature annotations (from the PubMed database) to evaluate the suitability of (human and rat) in vitro systems as well as rat in vivo systems to model human toxicity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ymeth.2017.07.010DOI Listing

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