利用人类遗传和不良结果通路(AOP)数据为人类健康风险评估中的易感性提供信息。

Holly M Mortensen, John Chamberlin, Bonnie Joubert, Michelle Angrish, Nisha Sipes, Janice S Lee, Susan Y Euling
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于缺乏暴露于特定环境化学品或药物后的易感性和变异性数据,对人类健康风险评估(HHRA)中易感性差异的估计受到了挑战。随着包含多态性和其他遗传数据的可用数据源越来越多,可以更好地将告知易感性的人类遗传变异性纳入HHRA。最近的一项政策,即2016年《弗兰克·r·劳滕伯格21世纪化学品安全法案》,要求美国环境保护局评估新的和现有的有毒化学品,明确考虑所有类型的易感人群(生命阶段、暴露、遗传等)。我们建议使用不良结果通路(AOP)构建来组织、识别和表征人类HHRA的遗传易感性。我们探索如何利用公开可用的人类遗传数据集来获得对分子事件的机制理解,并表征人类对不良结果的易感性。我们提出了一种计算方法,该方法实现了公开可用的人类遗传数据,以优先考虑具有人类遗传变异性潜力的aop。我们描述了这种方法在多个描述的AOPs中对健康结果感兴趣的应用,并通过关注单个分子启动事件。这有助于提高人类对单一和多种化学品在HHRA中使用的易感性估计的长期目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Leveraging human genetic and adverse outcome pathway (AOP) data to inform susceptibility in human health risk assessment.

Leveraging human genetic and adverse outcome pathway (AOP) data to inform susceptibility in human health risk assessment.

Leveraging human genetic and adverse outcome pathway (AOP) data to inform susceptibility in human health risk assessment.

Leveraging human genetic and adverse outcome pathway (AOP) data to inform susceptibility in human health risk assessment.

Estimation of susceptibility differences in human health risk assessment (HHRA) has been challenged by a lack of available susceptibility and variability data after exposure to a specific environmental chemical or pharmaceutical. With the increasingly large number of available data sources that contain polymorphism and other genetic data, human genetic variability that informs susceptibility can be better incorporated into HHRA. A recent policy, the 2016 The Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the twenty-first Century Act, requires the US Environmental Protection Agency to evaluate new and existing toxic chemicals with explicit consideration of susceptible populations of all types (life stage, exposure, genetic, etc.). We propose using the adverse outcome pathway (AOP) construct to organize, identify, and characterize human genetic susceptibility in HHRA. We explore how publicly available human genetic datasets can be used to gain mechanistic understanding of molecular events and characterize human susceptibility for an adverse outcome. We present a computational method that implements publicly available human genetic data to prioritize AOPs with potential for human genetic variability. We describe the application of this approach across multiple described AOPs for health outcomes of interest, and by focusing on a single molecular initiating event. This contributes to a long-term goal to improve estimates of human susceptibility for use in HHRA for single and multiple chemicals.

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