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Quantifying intrinsic chemical reactivity of molecular structural features for protein binding and reactive toxicity, using the MOSES chemoinformatics system

Covalent binding of xenobiotic compounds to endogenous biomolecular sites, e.g. protein residues, leads to potentially irreversible toxic effects such as enhanced acute toxicity or skin sensitization [1]. This mechanistic knowledge provides the basis for the in silico prediction of these toxicities, as required by the EU REACH legislation and the EU Cosmetics Directive. A general toxicity prediction can be based on three consecutive steps [2]: (1.) Identification of a potential reactive protein binding mechanism via a set of molecular structural features. Those structural features can be encoded by the Chemical Subgraph Representation Markup Language (CSRML), that supports a flexible annotation of meta information, including physicochemical properties as annotations. (2.) Confirmation and quantification of (bio)chemical reactivity. The potential for a chemical to be reactive can be captured by mechanistically based QSAR models. This intrinsic reactivity is calculated rapidly by descriptors of the chemoinformatics platform Molecular Structure Encoding System (MOSES) [3]. It represents electronic, steric and resonance effects in chemical structures. The performances obtained by these reactivity models are close to time-consuming quantum chemical reactivity calculations, e.g., se = 0.44 versus 0.40 for glutathione adduct formation via Michael addition, comparing predicted values to an experimental reactivity dataset [1]. (3.) Establishing a relationship between calculated reactivity and toxicity. The predicted intrinsic reactivity values were linked to the computational prediction for different modes of toxic action, with good correlations between predicted and in vitro toxicity (up to r2=0.86).

The combined use of structural information and computed reactivity could assist in the non-animal based risk assessment of chemicals for regulatory purposes and in the application of integrated testing strategies (ITS). The research has received funding from the EU FP7 COSMOS Project (grant agreement n° 266835) and financing from COLIPA.

References

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  2. Schwöbel JAH, et al: Application of a computational model for Michael addition reactivity in the prediction of toxicity to Tetrahymena pyriformis. Chemosphere. 2011, 85 (6): 1066-1074. 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2011.07.037.

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  3. MOSES. is a C++ chemoinformatics software library that is developed and maintained by Molecular Networks GmbH, Erlangen, Germany (http://www.molecular-networks.com/software/moses/)

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Correspondence to Johannes AH Schwöbel.

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Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Schwöbel, J.A., Bienfait, B., Gasteiger, J. et al. Quantifying intrinsic chemical reactivity of molecular structural features for protein binding and reactive toxicity, using the MOSES chemoinformatics system. J Cheminform 4 (Suppl 1), O8 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/1758-2946-4-S1-O8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1758-2946-4-S1-O8

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