The objective of this application is to develop an accurate high-throughput genotoxicity screening system with high specificity and accuracy using our established and well-validated toxicogenomic biomarker in cultured human cells. Genotoxicity represented by chromosome damage and mutations in DNA is considered to be the hallmark of carcinogenic risk. The standard genotoxicity assays, especially in the case of in vitro chromosome aberration assays, have a high false positive rate which results in costly and time consuming follow up assays that increase the cost of drug development and chemical safety assessment. Hence, gaining insight into genotoxic mechanisms and distinguishing those false positive genotoxicity findings caused by nongenotoxic mechanisms is of great value, so a simple, reliable technology proposed here would be sought after by pharmaceutical and chemical companies. Our biomarker, TGx-28.65, is capable of recognizing incorrectly identified compounds. The specificity of genotoxicity prediction by TGx-28.65, the intra- and inter- laboratory reproducibility, and the reproducibility on different technical platforms have been carefully validated by us and by a second laboratory in follow-up studies. Our TGx-28.65 biomarker recently was incorporated into the ?1500 Genes? panel for the Tox21 Phase III high throughput transcriptomics project. In the Phase I feasibility project we propose to develop a commercially viable and efficient high-throughput genotoxicity screening system using TGx-28.65, which has shown remarkable specificity and robustness for genotoxicity prediction. Our technical approach will employ direct digital counting technology to achieve high levels of precision, linearity, and reproducibility in measuring the expression levels of 65 genes in TGx-28.65 simultaneously. The proposed approach will provide significant benefits in comparison to the current genotoxicity battery and is poised to be commercially successful.

Public Health Relevance

Genotoxicity testing is an essential component of the safety assessment paradigm required by regulatory agencies world-wide for drug candidates, industrial chemicals and environmental pollutants. However, the current genotoxicity testing battery features high incidence of false positive finding for in vitro chromosome damage assays, that provides a challenge to both industry and regulatory agencies. This proposal addresses the high Incidence of false positive findings by applying the genomic biomarker TGx-28.65, which was identified by the Fornace laboratory, and that is capable of identifying relevant genotoxic responses. The Phase I proposal will primarily be a feasibility and proof-of-principle project for developing a high-throughput TGx-28.65-based screening service and later a genotoxicity kit. The successful completion of this project will enable a broad application of the first toxicogenomics assay for genotoxicity, i.e. DNA damage, assessment in the pharmaceutical and chemical industry. Furthermore, the automated screening system is expected to improve drug discovery and risk assessment of industrial chemicals.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase I (R43)
Project #
1R43ES026473-01
Application #
9045905
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Shaughnessy, Daniel
Project Start
2016-03-01
Project End
2017-02-28
Budget Start
2016-03-01
Budget End
2017-02-28
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Trevigen, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
807864772
City
Gaithersburg
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
20877
Li, Heng-Hong; Chen, Renxiang; Hyduke, Daniel R et al. (2017) Development and validation of a high-throughput transcriptomic biomarker to address 21st century genetic toxicology needs. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114:E10881-E10889