Abstract

All chemicals can interfere with cellular membranes and this leads to baseline toxicity, which is the minimal toxicity any chemical elicits. The critical membrane burden is constant for all chemicals; that is, the dosing concentrations to trigger baseline toxicity decrease with increasing hydrophobicity of the chemicals. Quantitative structure-activity relationships, based on hydrophobicity of chemicals, have been established to predict nominal concentrations causing baseline toxicity in human and mammalian cell lines. However, their applicability is limited to hydrophilic neutral compounds. To develop a prediction model that includes more hydrophobic and charged organic chemicals, a mass balance model was applied for mammalian cells (AREc32, AhR-CALUX, PPARγ-BLA, and SH-SY5Y) considering different bioassay conditions. The critical membrane burden for baseline toxicity was converted into nominal concentration causing 10% cytotoxicity by baseline toxicity (IC10,baseline) using a mass balance model whose main chemical input parameter was the liposome-water partition constants (Klip/w) for neutral chemicals or the speciation-corrected Dlip/w(pH 7.4) for ionizable chemicals plus the bioassay-specific protein, lipid, and water contents of cells and media. In these bioassay-specific models, log(1/IC10,baseline) increased with increasing hydrophobicity, and the relationship started to level off at log Dlip/w around 2. The bioassay-specific models were applied to 392 chemicals covering a broad range of hydrophobicity and speciation. Comparing the predicted IC10,baseline and experimental cytotoxicity IC10, known baseline toxicants and many additional chemicals were identified as baseline toxicants, while the others were classified based on specificity of their modes of action in the four cell lines, confirming excess toxicity of some fungicides, antibiotics, and uncouplers. Given the similarity of the bioassay-specific models, we propose a generalized baseline-model for adherent human cell lines: log[1/IC10,baseline (M)] = 1.23 + 4.97 × (1 - e-0.236logDlip/w). The derived models for baseline toxicity may serve for specificity analysis in reporter gene and neurotoxicity assays as well as for planning the dosing for cell-based assays.

Full Text
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