Research Highlights
Sustainable Approaches to Analyzing Chemical Toxicity
BackgroundThe demand for toxicological testing has grown significantly along with increasing public and governmental concern for the safety of new drugs and industrial chemicals. EPA’s New Chemicals Program was established in 2007 to allow the identification and control of new chemical substances. The New Chemicals Program functions as a gatekeeper that can identify conditions, up to and including a ban on production, to be placed on a new chemical before it enters the marketplace. Under this program, manufacturers must provide test data on new chemicals detailing their risk of carcinogenic, mutagenic, acute, and chronic effects on human health. Environmental test data must show acute toxicity to invertebrates and fish, as well as bioaccumulation data (long-term environmental effects.) In the absence of the manufacturer’s own test data, EPA testing procedures use quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models to predict the toxicity of new industrial chemicals. QSAR models express the correlation between the chemical’s physicochemical properties and its toxicity. EPA’s ECOSAR (Ecological Structure Activity Relationship) software uses more than 100 QSAR models for 42 different chemical classes to estimate the toxicity of industrial chemicals to aquatic organisms such as fish, invertebrates, and algae. However, because these models are not species-specific, NRMRL sustainability researchers are developing molecular structure software that can be used to estimate toxicity for specific species. For example, the new software tool estimates the concentrations of chemicals in water that will kill half of a specific fish population (i.e., fathead minnows) in a four-day period. The software estimates toxicity directly from molecular structure, and no animal testing is involved. The new software tool will allow the user to simply input a chemical to be evaluated by drawing it in a sketcher window, entering a SMILES (Daylight Chemical Information System 2006) string or by entering other standardized formats for molecular structures. Once entered, the program calculates the molecular descriptor values and then estimates the toxicity. It is expected that the tool will aid regulatory agencies and industry to assess chemicals for programs such as EPA’s New Chemicals Program. Five validated QSAR methodologies are included in the new T.E.S.T. software tool. They are detailed at the Clean Processes Program’s QSAR Web page. Readers who are interested in a full report and discussion of the QSAR methodologies used in the program research will find information in: Martin, T.M., P. Harten, R.Venkatapathy, S. Das, and D.M. Young. (2008). “A Hierarchical Clustering Methodology for the Estimation of Toxicity.” Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods, 18, 2: 251–266. ContactJane Ice, NRMRL Office of Public Affairs (513) 569-7311 Hot off the Presses—NRMRL PublicationsBlack, J.A., T.R. Dean, K. Foarde and M.Y. Menetrez. (2008). “Detection of Stachybotrys chartarum using rRNA, tri5, and β-tubulin primers and determining their relative copy number by real-time PCR.” Mycological Research , 112, 7: 845–851. Jegadeesan, G., S.R. Al-Abed and P. Pinto. (2008). “Influence of trace metal distribution on its leachability from coal fly ash.” Fuel , 87, 10–11: 1887-1893. Ma, Y. and M.D. Hays. (2008). “Thermal extraction–two-dimensional gas chromatography–mass spectrometry with heart-cutting for nitrogen heterocyclics in biomass burning aerosols.” Journal of Chromatography A , 1200, 2: 228–234 Lee, C., D.G. Tabor and K. A. Cowen. (2008). “Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) test of dioxin emission monitors.” Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management , 10, 1: 38-45. EPA ReportsAttenuated Anaerobic Dechlorination of Groundwater Using HRC® MACTEC - Harding ESE: Demonstration Bulletin (PDF) (2 pp, 120 KB) (EPA/540/R-08/003) August 2008 |