Login / Signup

Applications of Zebrafish Embryo Models to Predict Developmental Toxicity for Agrochemical Product Development.

Enrica BianchiBeas BhattacharyaAndrew J BowlingHeather E PencePaige C MundyGabe JonesArantza MurianaWilliam E GreverAnthony Pappas-GartonShreedharan SriramJessica LaRoccaMaria Bondesson
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2024)
The development of safe crop protection products is a complex process that traditionally relies on intensive animal use for hazard identification. Methods that capture toxicity in early stages of agrochemical discovery programs enable a more efficient and sustainable product development pipeline. Here, we explored whether the zebrafish model can be leveraged to identify mammalian-relevant toxicity. We used transgenic zebrafish to assess developmental toxicity following exposures to known mammalian teratogens and captured larval morphological malformations, including bone and vascular perturbations. We further applied toxicogenomics to identify common biomarker signatures of teratogen exposure. The results show that the larval malformation assay predicted teratogenicity with 82.35% accuracy, 87.50% specificity, and 77.78% sensitivity. Similar and slightly lower accuracies were obtained with the vascular and bone assays, respectively. A set of 20 biomarkers were identified that efficiently segregated teratogenic chemicals from nonteratogens. In conclusion, zebrafish are valuable, robust, and cost-effective models for toxicity testing in the early stages of product development.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • high throughput
  • bone mineral density
  • small molecule
  • public health
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • postmenopausal women