Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

HTTPS

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock (LockA locked padlock) or https:// means you have safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

  • Environmental Topics
  • Laws & Regulations
  • Report a Violation
  • About EPA
Contact Us

Grantee Research Project Results

Development of Pathway Selective Cells and Assays for Sensitive Detection of Environmental Toxicants via High Throughput Label-Free Cell-Based Screening

EPA Contract Number: EPD13015
Title: Development of Pathway Selective Cells and Assays for Sensitive Detection of Environmental Toxicants via High Throughput Label-Free Cell-Based Screening
Investigators: Irlan, Jeff
Small Business: ACEA Biosciences, Inc.
EPA Contact: Richards, April
Phase: I
Project Period: May 15, 2013 through November 14, 2013
Project Amount: $78,881
RFA: Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) - Phase I (2013) RFA Text |  Recipients Lists
Research Category: SBIR - Innovation in Manufacturing , Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)

Description:

Environmental pollutants that impact critical biological pathways involved in human development and physiology can have unpredictable effects on health. Among these critical pathways, various receptor tyrosine kinases, such as sonic hedgehog, transforming growth factor beta, Notch and WNT, are known or suspected mediators of the effect of numerous environmental toxicants produced during manufacturing, present in the air and water supply. The interconnected nature of these pathways, and finely tuned spatial and temporal regulation, make them simultaneously broad targets for impactful environmental pollutants and challenging to efficiently model in the laboratory.
 
Previously, direct modeling of the effect of environmental toxicants on critical developmental and physiological pathways in a comprehensive or holistic manner involved the use of animal models, which are expensive, labor-intensive, time consuming, low throughput and may not always be highly predictive of human responses. Many of these key developmental pathways overlap with targets of modern oncology drug discovery efforts due to their misregulation in many cancers. A multitude of sophisticated, high-throughput assays and technologies focused on the identification of modulators of these pathways have been developed and marketed for drug discovery applications of the last decade. Among these, label-free cell-based assays provide an opportunity to assess the impact of toxicants on biological pathways in a relatively holistic and biologically relevant context compared to traditional HTS assays. While label-free, cell-based approaches to the assessment of pathway modulators lack the ability to detect tissue and organism-level effects, they have proven to be predictive of toxicity and efficacy of small molecule drugs in the clinic, in part due to the choice of biologically relevant human cell lines matching the biological context of the pathways being assayed.
 

This project will help us to research and develop for eventual commercialization a panel of validated cell lines, protocols and data analysis methods to assess toxic effects of molecules on the critical developmental pathways outlined above on existing, commercially available high-throughput label-free screening systems. The first phase consists of initial feasibility studies using receptor tyrosine kinase pathways to broadly assess which pathways can potentially be interrogated, and for each, what toxicant classes may be detected. The optimization of product design and production techniques for stable scale-up will be conducted, followed by assay optimization for each pathway-specific product. Finally, assay miniaturization, testing under HTS automation workflows, development and validation of data analysis parameters, and preliminary validation of assay selectivity will be conducted to generate a product suitable of commercialization.

Supplemental Keywords:

toxicants, tyrosine kinases, cell-based screening

Progress and Final Reports:

  • Final Report
  • Top of Page

    The perspectives, information and conclusions conveyed in research project abstracts, progress reports, final reports, journal abstracts and journal publications convey the viewpoints of the principal investigator and may not represent the views and policies of ORD and EPA. Conclusions drawn by the principal investigators have not been reviewed by the Agency.

    Project Research Results

    • Final Report

    Site Navigation

    • Grantee Research Project Results Home
    • Grantee Research Project Results Basic Search
    • Grantee Research Project Results Advanced Search
    • Grantee Research Project Results Fielded Search
    • Publication search
    • EPA Regional Search

    Related Information

    • Search Help
    • About our data collection
    • Research Grants
    • P3: Student Design Competition
    • Research Fellowships
    • Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
    Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
    Last updated April 28, 2023
    United States Environmental Protection Agency

    Discover.

    • Accessibility
    • Budget & Performance
    • Contracting
    • EPA www Web Snapshot
    • Grants
    • No FEAR Act Data
    • Plain Writing
    • Privacy
    • Privacy and Security Notice

    Connect.

    • Data.gov
    • Inspector General
    • Jobs
    • Newsroom
    • Open Government
    • Regulations.gov
    • Subscribe
    • USA.gov
    • White House

    Ask.

    • Contact EPA
    • EPA Disclaimers
    • Hotlines
    • FOIA Requests
    • Frequent Questions

    Follow.