
Project
Toxicological characterization of novel food and feed
The assessment of the safety of new generations of complex foods and feeds (including genetically modified crops) is carried out using 28-day and 90-day feed/toxicity trials. There is a great deal of discussion about the suitability and sensitivity of animal trials used to assess the safety of these complex products.
Goal
This project has three long-term objectives:
1) The toxicological characterisation of existing or new complex products and suspect preparations using a battery of in vitro assays for specific toxicity.
2) The use of omics techniques (gene expression and metabolite profiles) to analyse existing or new foods to detect toxic properties.
3) The implementation of these new methods/approaches to make a contribution to the refinement, reduction and, where relevant, replacement of existing animal trials for feed and toxicity tests.
We intend to actively communicate the opportunities this new approach offers for the risk assessment of complex mixtures.
Method
The following specific objectives will be addressed in 2014:
1) Review the suitability and strength of in vitro effect and bioactivation tests in combination with transcriptomics techniques for the broad screening of the potential hazards posed by complex products. This review will be carried out using herb mixtures (including mixtures based on Aristolochia and tansy ragwort) and new crops (potato lines) as cases.
2) Use omics techniques to prepare gene expression and metabolite profiles of existing and new complex foods using for future use in risk assessments.
Project result
The knowledge and expertise acquired during this project will be used to submit recommendations for the policy to be adopted in response to incidents and crises.
This project will provide an insight into the practicability of in vitro methods and omics techniques for the assessment of the safety of complex new foods and animal feeds, including products containing ingredients originating from GMO crops. The results will serve purposes including the provision of input for discussions within national and international authorities and organisations, in particular discussions on the predictive value of animal trials for the assessment of food safety and the adoption of in vitro approaches (based on omics) as an alternative.
Publications
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Development of a Web-Based Toolbox to Support Quantitative In-Vitro-to-In-Vivo Extrapolations (QIVIVE) within Nonanimal Testing Strategies
Chemical Research in Toxicology (2021), Volume: 34, Issue: 2 - ISSN 0893-228X - p. 460-472. -
Potential of ToxCast Data in the Safety Assessment of Food Chemicals
Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology (2020), Volume: 174, Issue: 2 - ISSN 1096-6080 - p. 326-340. -
Towards harmonization of test methods for in vitro hepatic clearance studies
Toxicology in Vitro (2020), Volume: 63 - ISSN 0887-2333 -
New approach methodologies (NAMs) for human-relevant biokinetics predictions. Meeting the paradigm shift in toxicology towards an animal-free chemical risk assessment
Altex (2020), Volume: 37, Issue: 4 - ISSN 1868-596X - p. 607-622. -
Pyrrolizidine alkaloids in food and phytomedicine : Occurrence, exposure, toxicity, mechanisms, and risk assessment - A review
Food and Chemical Toxicology (2020), Volume: 136 - ISSN 0278-6915 -
Use of omics analytical methods in the study of genetically modified maize varieties tested in 90 days feeding trials
Food Chemistry (2019), Volume: 292 - ISSN 0308-8146 - p. 359-371. -
Next generation physiologically based kinetic (NG-PBK) models in support of regulatory decision making
Computational Toxicology (2019), Volume: 9 - ISSN 2468-1113 - p. 61-72. -
Quantitative in vitro-to-in vivo extrapolation (QIVIVE) of estrogenic and anti-androgenic potencies of BPA and BADGE analogues
Archives of Toxicology (2019), Volume: 93, Issue: 7 - ISSN 0340-5761 - p. 1941-1953. -
Determination of genotoxic potencies of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in HepaRG cells using the γH2AX assay
Food and Chemical Toxicology (2019), Volume: 131 - ISSN 0278-6915 -
Omics analyses of potato plant materials using an improved one-class classification tool to identify aberrant compositional profiles in risk assessment procedures
Food Chemistry (2019), Volume: 292 - ISSN 0308-8146 - p. 350-358.