TY - JOUR
T1 - Automation of an in vitro cytotoxicity assay used to estimate starting doses in acute oral systemic toxicity tests
AU - Bouhifd, Mounir
AU - Bories, Gilles
AU - Casado, Juan
AU - Coecke, Sandra
AU - Norlén, Hedvig
AU - Parissis, Nicholaos
AU - Marcelino Rodrigues, Robim
AU - Whelan, Maurice
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Application of High Throughput Screening (HTS) to the regulatory safety assessment of chemicals is still
in its infancy but shows great promise in terms of facilitating better understanding of toxicological
modes-of-action, reducing the reliance on animal testing, and allowing more data-poor chemicals to
be assessed at a reasonable cost. To promote the uptake and acceptance of HTS approaches, we describe
in a stepwise manner how a well known cytotoxicity assay can be automated to increase throughput
while maintaining reliability. Results generated with selected reference chemicals compared very favourably with data obtained from a previous international validation study concerning the prediction of acute systemic toxicity in rodents. The automated assay was then included in a formal ECVAM validation study to determine if the assay could be used for binary classification of chemicals with respect to their acute oral toxicity, using a threshold equivalent to a dose of 2000 mg/kg b.w. in a rodent bioassay (LD50). This involved the blind-testing of 56 reference chemicals on the HTS platform to produce concentration- response and IC50 data. Finally, the assay was adapted to a format more suited to higher throughput testing without compromising the quality of the data obtained.
AB - Application of High Throughput Screening (HTS) to the regulatory safety assessment of chemicals is still
in its infancy but shows great promise in terms of facilitating better understanding of toxicological
modes-of-action, reducing the reliance on animal testing, and allowing more data-poor chemicals to
be assessed at a reasonable cost. To promote the uptake and acceptance of HTS approaches, we describe
in a stepwise manner how a well known cytotoxicity assay can be automated to increase throughput
while maintaining reliability. Results generated with selected reference chemicals compared very favourably with data obtained from a previous international validation study concerning the prediction of acute systemic toxicity in rodents. The automated assay was then included in a formal ECVAM validation study to determine if the assay could be used for binary classification of chemicals with respect to their acute oral toxicity, using a threshold equivalent to a dose of 2000 mg/kg b.w. in a rodent bioassay (LD50). This involved the blind-testing of 56 reference chemicals on the HTS platform to produce concentration- response and IC50 data. Finally, the assay was adapted to a format more suited to higher throughput testing without compromising the quality of the data obtained.
KW - automation
M3 - Article
SN - 0278-6915
VL - 50
SP - 2084
EP - 2096
JO - Food and Chemical Toxicology
JF - Food and Chemical Toxicology
ER -