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Classification of Developmental Toxicants in a Human iPSC Transcriptomics-Based Test
Author(s) -
Anna Cherianidou,
Florian Seidel,
Franziska Kappenberg,
Nadine Dreser,
Jonathan Blum,
Tanja Waldmann,
Nils Blüthgen,
Johannes Meisig,
Katrin Madjar,
Margit Henry,
Tamara Rotshteyn,
Rosemarie Marchan,
Karolina Edlund,
Marcel Leist,
Jörg Rahnenführer,
Agapios Sachinidis,
Jan G. Hengstler
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
chemical research in toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.031
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1520-5010
pISSN - 0893-228X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.1c00392
Subject(s) - cmax , logistic regression , area under the curve , toxicology , chemistry , pharmacology , biology , medicine , pharmacokinetics
Despite the progress made in developmental toxicology, there is a great need for in vitro tests that identify developmental toxicants in relation to human oral doses and blood concentrations. In the present study, we established the hiPSC-based UKK2 in vitro test and analyzed genome-wide expression profiles of 23 known teratogens and 16 non-teratogens. Compounds were analyzed at the maximal plasma concentration ( C max ) and at 20-fold C max for a 24 h incubation period in three independent experiments. Based on the 1000 probe sets with the highest variance and including information on cytotoxicity, penalized logistic regression with leave-one-out cross-validation was used to classify the compounds as test-positive or test-negative, reaching an area under the curve (AUC), accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 0.96, 0.92, 0.96, and 0.88, respectively. Omitting the cytotoxicity information reduced the test performance to an AUC of 0.94, an accuracy of 0.79, and a sensitivity of 0.74. A second method, which used the number of significantly deregulated probe sets to classify the compounds, resulted in a specificity of 1; however, the AUC (0.90), accuracy (0.90), and sensitivity (0.83) were inferior compared to those of the logistic regression-based procedure. Finally, no increased performance was achieved when the high test concentrations (20-fold C max ) were used, in comparison to testing within the realistic clinical range (1-fold C max ). In conclusion, although further optimization is required, for example, by including additional readouts and cell systems that model different developmental processes, the UKK2-test in its present form can support the early discovery-phase detection of human developmental toxicants.

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