posted on 2015-07-21, 00:00authored byPatience Browne, Richard S. Judson, Warren
M. Casey, Nicole C. Kleinstreuer, Russell S. Thomas
The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is considering high-throughput
and computational methods to evaluate the endocrine bioactivity of
environmental chemicals. Here we describe a multistep, performance-based
validation of new methods and demonstrate that these new tools are
sufficiently robust to be used in the Endocrine Disruptor Screening
Program (EDSP). Results from 18 estrogen receptor (ER) ToxCast high-throughput
screening assays were integrated into a computational model that can
discriminate bioactivity from assay-specific interference and cytotoxicity.
Model scores range from 0 (no activity) to 1 (bioactivity of 17β-estradiol).
ToxCast ER model performance was evaluated for reference chemicals,
as well as results of EDSP Tier 1 screening assays in current practice.
The ToxCast ER model accuracy was 86% to 93% when compared to reference
chemicals and predicted results of EDSP Tier 1 guideline and other
uterotrophic studies with 84% to 100% accuracy. The performance of
high-throughput assays and ToxCast ER model predictions demonstrates
that these methods correctly identify active and inactive reference
chemicals, provide a measure of relative ER bioactivity, and rapidly
identify chemicals with potential endocrine bioactivities for additional
screening and testing. EPA is accepting ToxCast ER model data for
1812 chemicals as alternatives for EDSP Tier 1 ER binding, ER transactivation,
and uterotrophic assays.