The estimation of acute oral toxicity (LD 50 ) of G-series organophosphorus-based chemical warfare agents using quantitative and qualitative toxicology in silico methods.
Maciej NogaAgata MichalskaKamil JurowskiPublished in: Archives of toxicology (2024)
The idea of this study was the estimation of the theoretical acute toxicity (t-LD 50 , rat, oral dose) of organophosphorus-based chemical warfare agents from the G-series (n = 12) using different in silico methods. Initially identified in Germany, the G-type nerve agents include potent compounds such as tabun, sarin, and soman. Despite their historical significance, there is a noticeable gap in acute toxicity data for these agents. This study employs qualitative (STopTox and AdmetSAR) and quantitative (TEST; CATMoS; ProTox-II and QSAR Toolbox) in silico methods to predict LD 50 values, offering an ethical alternative to animal testing. Additionally, we conducted quantitative extrapolation from animals, and the results of qualitative tests confirmed the acute toxicity potential of these substances and enabled the identification of toxicophoric groups. According to our estimations, the most lethal agents within this category were GV, soman (GD), sarin (GB), thiosarin (GBS), and chlorosarin (GC), with t-LD 50 values (oral administration, extrapolated from rat to human) of 0.05 mg/kg bw, 0.08 mg/kg bw, 0.12 mg/kg bw, 0.15 mg/kg bw, and 0.17 mg/kg bw, respectively. On the contrary, compounds with a cycloalkane attached to the phospho-oxygen linkage, specifically methyl cyclosarin and cyclosarin, were found to be the least toxic, with values of 2.28 mg/kg bw and 3.03 mg/kg bw. The findings aim to fill the knowledge gap regarding the acute toxicity of these agents, highlighting the need for modern toxicological methods that align with ethical considerations, next-generation risk assessment (NGRA) and the 3Rs (replacement, reduction and refinement) principles.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- oxidative stress
- aortic dissection
- risk assessment
- molecular docking
- drug induced
- healthcare
- systematic review
- endothelial cells
- hepatitis b virus
- intensive care unit
- heavy metals
- mass spectrometry
- mechanical ventilation
- decision making
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- deep learning
- human immunodeficiency virus
- human health
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- liquid chromatography
- anti inflammatory