Flame retardant chemicals (FRCs) commonly added to many consumer products
present a human exposure burden associated with adverse health effects. Under
pressure from consumers, FRC manufacturers have adopted some purportedly safer
replacements for first-generation brominated diphenyl ethers (BDEs). In contrast,
second and third-generation organophosphates and other alternative chemistries have
limited bioactivity data available to estimate their hazard potential. In order to evaluate
the toxicity of existing and potential replacement FRCs, we need efficient screening
methods. We built a 61-FRC library in which we systemically assessed developmental
neurotoxic effects in the embryonic zebrafish model. Data were compared to publicly
available data generated in a battery of cell-based in vitro assays from ToxCast,
Tox21, and other alternative models. Of the 61 FRCs, 19 of 45 that were tested in the
ToxCast assays were bioactive in our zebrafish model. The zebrafish assays detected
bioactivity for 10 of the 12 previously classified developmental neurotoxic FRCs.
Developmental zebrafish were sufficiently sensitive at detecting FRC structurebioactivity
impacts that we were able to build a classification model using 12
physicochemical properties and 3 embryonic zebrafish assays that achieved a
balanced accuracy of 83%. This work illustrates the power of a multi-dimensional in
vivo platform to expand our ability to predict the hazard potential of new compounds
based on structural relatedness, ultimately leading to reliable toxicity predictions based
on chemical structure.
Revised: September 30, 2020 |
Published: September 1, 2020
Citation
Truong L., S.W. Marvel, D. Reif, D. Thomas, P. Pande, S. Dasgupta, and M. Simonich, et al. 2020.The multi-dimensional embryonic zebrafish platform predicts flame retardant bioactivity.Reproductive Toxicology 96.PNNL-SA-149984.doi:10.1016/j.reprotox.2020.08.007