TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaborative development of predictive toxicology applications
AU - Hardy, Barry J.
AU - Douglas, Nicki
AU - Helma, Christoph
AU - Rautenberg, Micha
AU - Jeliazkova, Nina
AU - Jeliazkov, Vedrin
AU - Nikolova, Ivelina
AU - Benigni, Romualdo
AU - Tcheremenskaia, Olga
AU - Kramer, Stefan
AU - Girschick, Tobias
AU - Buchwald, Fabian
AU - Wicker, Jörg
AU - Karwath, Andreas
AU - Gütlein, Martin
AU - Maunz, Andreas
AU - Sarimveis, Haralambos
AU - Melagraki, Georgia
AU - Afantitis, Antreas
AU - Sopasakis, Pantelis
AU - Gallagher, David
AU - Poroikov, Vladimir
AU - Filimonov, Dmitry
AU - Zakharov, Alexey V.
AU - Lagunin, Alexey
AU - Gloriozova, Tatyana
AU - Novikov, Sergey
AU - Skvortsova, Natalia
AU - Druzhilovsky, Dmitry
AU - Chawla, Sunil
AU - Ghosh, Indira
AU - Ray, Surajit
AU - Patel, Hitesh
AU - Escher, Sylvia
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - OpenTox provides an interoperable, standards-based Framework for the support of predictive toxicology data management, algorithms, modelling, validation and reporting. It is relevant to satisfying the chemical safety assessment requirements of the REACH legislation as it supports access to experimental data, (Quantitative) Structure-Activity Relationship models, and toxicological information through an integrating platform that adheres to regulatory requirements and OECD validation principles. Initial research defined the essential components of the Framework including the approach to data access, schema and management, use of controlled vocabularies and ontologies, architecture, web service and communications protocols, and selection and integration of algorithms for predictive modelling. OpenTox provides end-user oriented tools to non-computational specialists, risk assessors, and toxicological experts in addition to Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) for developers of new applications. OpenTox actively supports public standards for data representation, interfaces, vocabularies and ontologies, Open Source approaches to core platform components, and community-based collaboration approaches, so as to progress system interoperability goals. The OpenTox Framework includes APIs and services for compounds, datasets, features, algorithms, models, ontologies, tasks, validation, and reporting which may be combined into multiple applications satisfying a variety of different user needs. OpenTox applications are based on a set of distributed, interoperable OpenTox API-compliant REST web services. The OpenTox approach to ontology allows for efficient mapping of complementary data coming from different datasets into a unifying structure having a shared terminology and representation. Two initial OpenTox applications are presented as an illustration of the potential impact of OpenTox for high-quality and consistent structure-activity relationship modelling of REACH-relevant endpoints: ToxPredict which predicts and reports on toxicities for endpoints for an input chemical structure, and ToxCreate which builds and validates a predictive toxicity model based on an input toxicology dataset. Because of the extensible nature of the standardised Framework design, barriers of interoperability between applications and content are removed, as the user may combine data, models and validation from multiple sources in a dependable and time-effective way.
AB - OpenTox provides an interoperable, standards-based Framework for the support of predictive toxicology data management, algorithms, modelling, validation and reporting. It is relevant to satisfying the chemical safety assessment requirements of the REACH legislation as it supports access to experimental data, (Quantitative) Structure-Activity Relationship models, and toxicological information through an integrating platform that adheres to regulatory requirements and OECD validation principles. Initial research defined the essential components of the Framework including the approach to data access, schema and management, use of controlled vocabularies and ontologies, architecture, web service and communications protocols, and selection and integration of algorithms for predictive modelling. OpenTox provides end-user oriented tools to non-computational specialists, risk assessors, and toxicological experts in addition to Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) for developers of new applications. OpenTox actively supports public standards for data representation, interfaces, vocabularies and ontologies, Open Source approaches to core platform components, and community-based collaboration approaches, so as to progress system interoperability goals. The OpenTox Framework includes APIs and services for compounds, datasets, features, algorithms, models, ontologies, tasks, validation, and reporting which may be combined into multiple applications satisfying a variety of different user needs. OpenTox applications are based on a set of distributed, interoperable OpenTox API-compliant REST web services. The OpenTox approach to ontology allows for efficient mapping of complementary data coming from different datasets into a unifying structure having a shared terminology and representation. Two initial OpenTox applications are presented as an illustration of the potential impact of OpenTox for high-quality and consistent structure-activity relationship modelling of REACH-relevant endpoints: ToxPredict which predicts and reports on toxicities for endpoints for an input chemical structure, and ToxCreate which builds and validates a predictive toxicity model based on an input toxicology dataset. Because of the extensible nature of the standardised Framework design, barriers of interoperability between applications and content are removed, as the user may combine data, models and validation from multiple sources in a dependable and time-effective way.
KW - crossvalidation, data mining, QSAR, scientific knowledge
U2 - 10.1186/1758-2946-2-7
DO - 10.1186/1758-2946-2-7
M3 - Article
SN - 1758-2946
VL - 2
SP - 7
JO - Journal of Cheminformatics
JF - Journal of Cheminformatics
ER -