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Abstract
Current screening methods for direct immunotoxic
chemicals are mainly based on general toxicity studies
with rodents. The present study aimed to identify transcriptome-
based functional classifiers that can eventually be
exploited for the development of in vitro screening assays
for direct immunotoxicity. To this end, a toxicogenomics
approach was applied in which gene expression changes in
human Jurkat lymphoblastic T cells were investigated in
response to a wide range of compounds, including direct
immunotoxicants, immunosuppressive drugs, and non-immunotoxic
control chemicals. On the basis of DNA
microarray data previously obtained by the exposure of
Jurkat cells to 31 test compounds (Shao et al. in Toxicol Sci
135(2):328–346, 2013), we identified a set of 93 genes, of
which 80 were significantly regulated (|numerical ratio| C1.62) by at least three compounds and the other 13
genes were significantly regulated by either one single
compound or compound class. A total of 28 most differentially
regulated genes were selected for qRT-PCR verification
using a training set of 44 compounds consisting of
the above-mentioned 31 compounds (23 immunotoxic and 8
non-immunotoxic) and 13 additional immunotoxicants.
Good correlation between the results of microarray and
qRT-PCR (Pearson’s correlation, R C 0.69) was found for
27 out of the 28 genes. Redundancy analysis of these 27
potential classifiers led to a final set of 25 genes. To assess
the performance of these genes, Jurkat cells were exposed to
20 additional compounds (external verification set) followed
by qRT-PCR. The classifier set of 25 genes gave a
good performance in the external verification: accuracy
85 %, true positive rate (sensitivity) 88 %, and true negative
rate (specificity) 67 %. Furthermore, on the basis of the
gene ontology annotation of the 25 classifier genes, the
immunotoxicants examined in this study could be categorized
into distinct functional subclasses. In conclusion, we
have identified and validated classifier genes that can be
used for the development of an in vitro assay for the identification
and initial characterization of hazards for direct
immunotoxicity of chemicals and drugs. This assay promises
to complement animal-free toxicity testing approaches
within the field of direct immunotoxicity.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 673-689 |
Journal | Archives of Toxicology |
Volume | 88 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
Keywords
- blood mononuclear-cells
- gene-expression
- cyclin g2
- in-vitro
- t-cells
- jurkat
- toxicogenomics
- bioactivation
- activation
- exposure
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Dive into the research topics of 'Transcriptome-based functional classifiers for direct immunotoxicity'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 2 Finished
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Functionele interpretatie van metabolomics en transcriptomics data (KB-17-003.01-004)
Hendriksen, P. (Project Leader)
1/01/11 → 31/12/14
Project: LVVN project
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Netherlands Toxicogenomics Center (KB-15-003-016, KB-06-003-002)
Peijnenburg, A. (Project Leader)
1/01/08 → 31/12/14
Project: LVVN project