t4 workshop report: Pathways of Toxicity.

View/ Open
Date
2014Author
Kleensang, Andre
Maertens, Alexandra
Rosenberg, Michael
Fitzpatrick, Suzanne
Lamb, Justin
Auerbach, Scott
Brennan, Richard
Crofton, Kevin M.
Gordon, Ben
Fornace, Albert J. Jr.
Gaido, Kevin
Gerhold, David
Haw, Robin
Henney, Adriano
Ma’ayan, Avi
McBride, Mary
Monti, Stefano
Ochs, Michael F.
Pandey, Akhilesh
Sharan, Roded
Stierum, Rob
Tugendreich, Stuart
Willett, Catherine
Wittwehr, Clemens
Xia, Jianguo
Patton, Geoffrey W.
Arvidson, Kirk
Bouhifd, Mounir
Hogberg, Helena T.
Luechtefeld, Thomas
Smirnova, Lena
Zhao, Liang
Adeleye, Yeyejide
Kanehisa, Minoru
Carmichael, Paul
Andersen, Melvin E.
Hartung, Thomas
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract
Despite wide-spread consensus on the need to transform toxicology and risk assessment in order to keep pace with technological and computational changes that have revolutionized the life sciences, there remains much work to be done to achieve the vision of toxicology based on a mechanistic foundation. To this end, a workshop was organized to explore one key aspect of this transformation - the development of Pathways of Toxicity as a key tool for hazard identification based on systems biology. Several issues were discussed in depth in the workshop: The first was the challenge of formally defining the concept of a Pathway of Toxicity (PoT), as distinct from, but complementary to, other toxicological pathway concepts such as mode of action (MoA). The workshop came up with a preliminary definition of PoT as "A molecular definition of cellular processes shown to mediate adverse outcomes of toxicants". It is further recognized that normal physiological pathways exist that maintain homeostasis and these, sufficiently perturbed, can become PoT. Second, the workshop sought to define the adequate public and commercial resources for PoT information, including data, visualization, analyses, tools, and use-cases, as well as the kinds of efforts that will be necessary to enable the creation of such a resource. Third, the workshop explored ways in which systems biology approaches could inform pathway annotation, and which resources are needed and available that can provide relevant PoT information to the diverse user communities.
Citation:
Kleensang, A., Maertens, A., Bouhifd, M., Hogberg, H., Luechtefeld, T., Smirnova, L., & ... Andersen, M. (2014). t4 workshop report. Altex, 31(1), 53-61.