Novel Genetic-based Tools for Toxicity Screening, Precision Medicine, and Mode of Action Analysis
Tuesday April 24, 2018
3:30 pm
-
6:00 pm
Eastern Time (ET)
Room 15A
TOX
Chair :
Brian Cummings
University of Georgia
Alison Harrill
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences / NIH
Novel tools that evaluate the genetic drivers and transcriptional responses to drug and chemical exposures have the potential to add important insights into toxicology evaluation. In this session, novel tools will be described that demonstrate utility for safety and risk assessment pipelines. These tools span (1) DNA methylation analysis, rodent population models that enable assessment of human population dynamics in susceptibility and avenues for precision medicine, (2) high-throughput transcriptomic screens that enable sensitive measures of chemical potency, (3) gene expression network analysis that informs intracellular chemical effects, and (4) yeast genetic screens that identify genetic susceptibility factors and inform toxicity mode of action.
Speakers
Brian Cummings
- University of Georgia
Novel Methods for Rapid Assessment of Toxicant-Induced Changes in DNA Methylation: Alternatives to Pyrosequencing and Methylome Analysis
Joshua Harrill
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
High-Throughput Transcriptomics in in vitro Chemical Screens, a Sensitive Tool for Benchmark Dose Assessment
Yue Wang Webster
- Lilly Research Laboratories
Weighted Gene Co-Expression Network Analysis (WGCNA): Systems Biology Approaches to Understanding Adverse Outcomes
Alison Harrill
- National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences / NIH
Diversity Outbred Mice – A Genetic Reference Population That Enabling Risk Predictions for Sensitive Subpopulations
Daniel Gatti
- The Jackson Laboratory
Pharmacogenetic Assessment of Drug Toxicity Using Diversity Outbred Mice
Chris Vulpe
- University of Florida
Genome Wide and Targeted CRISPR Functional Approaches in Toxicology