Virtual screening for environmental pollutants - Structure-activity
relationships applied to a database of industrial chemicals
Öberg, T.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 25, 1178-1183 (2006)
Abstract
The current risk paradigm calls for individual consideration and evaluation of
each separate environmental pollutant, but this does not reflect accurately the
cumulative impact of anthropogenic chemicals. In the present study, previously
validated structure–activity relationships were used to estimate
simultaneously the baseline toxicity and atmospheric persistence of
approximately 50,000 compounds. The results from this virtual screening indicate
fairly stable statistical distributions among small anthropogenic compounds. The
baseline toxicity was not changed much by halogen substitution, but a distinct
increase seemed to occur in the environmental persistence with increased
halogenation. The ratio of the atmospheric half-lives to the median lethal
concentrations provides a continuous scale with which to rank and summarize the
incremental environmental impacts in a mixture-exposure situation. Halogenated
compounds as a group obtained a high ranking in this data set, with well-known
pollutants at the very top: DDT metabolites and derivatives, polychlorinated
biphenyls, diphenyl ethers and dibenzofurans, chlorinated paraffins, chlorinated
benzenes and derivatives, hydrochlorofluorocarbons, and dichlorononylphenol.
Environmentally friendly chemicals that obtained the lowest rank are nearly all
hydroxylated and water-soluble. Virtual screening can assist with “green
chemistry” in designing safe and degradable products and enable assessment of
the efficiency in chemicals risk management.
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DOI: 10.1897/05-326R.1
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