vvEPA United States Environmental Protection Agency Role of Semantics, Ontologies, and Adverse Outcome Pathways as a Point of Integration in Chemical Assessments Michelle Angrish1, George Woodall1, Sean Watford2-3'4'5, and Paul Whaley6 1NCEA, US EPA, RTP, Durham. NC, 27711,2NCCT, US EPA, RTP, Durham, NC, 27711,3ORAU, Oak Ridge, TN, 37830 , "Environmental Science and Engineering, GSGPH UNC-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, Currently Booz Allen Hamilton, Washington D C., 6Evidence Based Toxicology Collaboration, JHUBSPH, MD and Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster, UK. Abstract The quality and utility of literature based chemical assessments has been improved by leveraging the power of systematic review (SR) and systematic mapping (SM, also referred to as evidence mapping) approaches to aggregating and evaluating evidence of health risks posed by exposure to environmental chemicals. Taking maximal advantage of SRs and SMs is currently impeded by linguistic inconsistencies resulting from different communities using different vocabularies to describe common study characteristics, requiring the systematic reviewer to anticipate all the concepts, relationships, and words related to a science question when developing a search string sensitive enough to locate all potentially relevant studies. The state-of-the-art approach, to use dictionaries and thesauruses are useful for ensuring all semantically related terms are included in a search, but they do not offer the context necessary to capture relationships between concepts, e.g. according to biological organization such as gene expression. We are therefore exploring the use of ontologies and semantic mapping as a part of evidence integration in literature based chemical assessments. An ontology is a controlled vocabulary of precisely-defined terms and the specified relationships between them, interpretable by both humans and machines. Here we give an example of how literature prioritized for thyroid and neurological health outcome data extracted from human and animal literature studies can be matched to ontology concepts that serve as a point of integration in a semantic framework bounded by a structured Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) framework. When implemented, this ontological approach may solve the problem of a researcher needing perfect a priori knowledge of all relevant terms and relationships in order to query a database for comprehensive information about mechanisms of thyroid toxicity: this information is already provided in the database ontology. Background Systematic Review (SR, Figure I ~) is a formal method used in literature based assessments meant to insure rigor and transparency. Systematic Mapping (SM, also referred to as evidence mapping) is a technique borrowing from SR principles and can be applied during the scoping, planning and problem formulation phase of a chemical assessment to summarize the characteristics of the evidence base. In chemical assessments, these characteristics are usually broad data categories such as evidence type, chemical, type of animal model or human population, outcome, etc. which are important to know before making decisions on how to approach the assessment, staffing needs, and to identify key data gaps. Semantics is the study of linguistics, their meaning, relationship, and structure. Ontologies are "A kind of controlled vocabulary of well-defined terms with specified relationships between those terms, capable of interpretation by both humans and computers" (whetzel et. Al, 2011). Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs, Figure 2 below) are meant to describe how perturbation of a biological system leads to a particular adverse health outcome using components called molecular initiating events (MIEs, green bar below), Key Events (KEs, yellow and orange bars below), Key Event Relationships (KERs, arrows below), and Adverse Outcomes (AOs, red bar below) that are supported by scientific information. Increasing biological organization Exposure to chemical X I Michelle Angrish I angrish.michelle@epa.gov I 919-541-5381 Approach: Evidence Mapping and literature-based information integration into an Adverse Outcome Pathway Bound the literature search by well characterized molecular targets in the thyroid pathway linked to adverse outcomes. >=> Problem Formulation, Scoping & Planning r\ rate Iterate ' Broad Literature Search Aim to find all potentially relevant citations <=> Title and Abstract screen results for potentially relevant studies and tag for evidence stream and health outcome. "=> Title/Abstract Screen Irrelevant studies are excluded based on PECO Statement (Population, Exposure, Comparator and Outcomes) 111!! i "i Bound literature search by: NA+/I" (Sodium/Iodide) Symporter (NIS) Neurological Health Outcomes Tag for evidence stream: Animal Human In vitro Tag for health outcome Hepatic Cardiovascular Neurological Etc. Subset studies tagged for Neurological health outcomes, screen for relevant studies, and tag for. Full Text Screen Exclude irrelevant studies (Population, Exposure, Comparator and Outcomes) 1 ฎ i Create an evidence inventory from well characterized studies that includes information on well characterized thyroid pathway components. Evidence Inventory ฆ4 i I Subset studies tagged for Neurological health outcomes, full text screen for relevance and tag for lA'/l" (Sodium/Iodide) Symporter (NIS). Inventory reported evidence Evidence Inventory z T Annotate evidence inventory with ontologies amenable to AOP framework J Level of biological organization Molecular Cellular Tissue Organ Individual Population Ontology semantic mappings National Cancer Institute (NCI): thyroxine (T4) +drug, food, chemical or biomedical material ++physiology/regulatory factor +++hormone ++++thyroid hormone +++++thyroxine synonym: thyroxin Protein Ontology (PO): Sodium Iodide Symporter (NIS) +molecular entity +++organic amino entity ++++amino acid chain +++++protein ++++++sodium/iodide cotransporter synonym: NIS Kev Event - Level of biological organization Process ComDonent(s) ซซ Process PO e.g. Sodium Iodide Symporter (NIS) mRNA > Object /y Context * * ' / x Key Event NCI Decreased thyroxine (T4) -D Feed annotated information into AOP AOP U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Research and Development 0% Printed on 100% recycled/recyclable paper % with a minimum 50% post-consumer ฆ W fiber using vegetable-based ink. The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. ------- |