Prediction of toxicity from chemical structure |
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Authors: | MD Barratt |
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Institution: | Marlin Consultancy, Bedford, UK. Martin.D.Barratt@BTInternet.com |
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Abstract: | The basis for the prediction of toxicity from chemical structure is that the properties of a chemical are implicit in its
molecular structure. Biological activity can be expressed as a function of partition and reactivity, that is, for a chemical
to be able to express its toxicity, it must be transported from its site of administration to its site of action and then
it must bind to or react with its receptor or target. This process may also involve metabolic transformation of the chemical.
The application of these principles to the prediction of the toxicity of new or untested chemicals has been achieved in a
number of different ways covering a wide range of complexity, from computer systems containing databases of hundreds of chemicals,
to simple "reading across" between chemicals with similar chemical/toxicological functionality. The common feature of the
approaches described in this article is that their starting point is a mechanistic hypothesis linking chemical structure and/or
functionality with the toxicological endpoint of interest. The prediction of toxicity from chemical structure can make a valuable
contribution to the reduction of animal usage in the screening out of potentially toxic chemicals at an early stage and in
providing data for making positive classifications of toxicity.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | structure– activity relationship skin sensitization skin corrosivity eye irritation reading across |
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