AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemicals can change the way genes are expressed in organisms, which helps us understand the effects of chemical exposure on health and the environment.
  • The study aimed to develop methods to analyze these gene expression changes over time and different concentrations of chemicals, creating a standardized way to interpret toxicogenomic data.
  • By applying their approach to zebrafish embryos exposed to specific chemicals, the researchers identified key gene responses and related them to developmental processes, paving the way for better risk assessment of chemical hazards.

Article Abstract

Background: Chemicals induce compound-specific changes in the transcriptome of an organism (toxicogenomic fingerprints). This provides potential insights about the cellular or physiological responses to chemical exposure and adverse effects, which is needed in assessment of chemical-related hazards or environmental health. In this regard, comparison or connection of different experiments becomes important when interpreting toxicogenomic experiments. Owing to lack of capturing response dynamics, comparability is often limited. In this study, we aim to overcome these constraints.

Results: We developed an experimental design and bioinformatic analysis strategy to infer time- and concentration-resolved toxicogenomic fingerprints. We projected the fingerprints to a universal coordinate system (toxicogenomic universe) based on a self-organizing map of toxicogenomic data retrieved from public databases. Genes clustering together in regions of the map indicate functional relation due to co-expression under chemical exposure. To allow for quantitative description and extrapolation of the gene expression responses we developed a time- and concentration-dependent regression model. We applied the analysis strategy in a microarray case study exposing zebrafish embryos to 3 selected model compounds including 2 cyclooxygenase inhibitors. After identification of key responses in the transcriptome we could compare and characterize their association to developmental, toxicokinetic, and toxicodynamic processes using the parameter estimates for affected gene clusters. Furthermore, we discuss an association of toxicogenomic effects with measured internal concentrations.

Conclusions: The design and analysis pipeline described here could serve as a blueprint for creating comparable toxicogenomic fingerprints of chemicals. It integrates, aggregates, and models time- and concentration-resolved toxicogenomic data.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6539241PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giz057DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

toxicogenomic fingerprints
12
toxicogenomic
8
chemical exposure
8
analysis strategy
8
time- concentration-resolved
8
concentration-resolved toxicogenomic
8
toxicogenomic data
8
map model-moving
4
model-moving observation
4
observation prediction
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!