Page last updated: 2024-11-04

ddt

Description Research Excerpts Clinical Trials Roles Classes Pathways Study Profile Bioassays Related Drugs Related Conditions Protein Interactions Research Growth Market Indicators

Description

1,1-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane: structure in first source [Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), National Library of Medicine, extracted Dec-2023]

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID3036
CHEMBL ID416898
CHEBI ID16130
SCHEMBL ID7181
MeSH IDM0005688

Synonyms (257)

Synonym
BIDD:PXR0066
BIDD:ER0496
BRD-K51799616-001-02-2
1-chloro-4-[2,2,2-trichloro-1-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]benzene
1,1-bis(4-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane
1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chlorobenzene]
CHEBI:16130 ,
alpha,alpha-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-beta,beta,beta-trichlorethane
benzene, 1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chloro-
ethane, 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-
DIVK1C_006654
guesapon
oms 16
R50 ,
dibovan
bis(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane
geusapon
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane
hildit
gesarex
2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1-trichloroethane
mutoxin
micro ddt 75
tech ddt
havero-extra
para,para'-ddt
chlorophenotoxum
1,1,1-trichlorobis(chlorophenyl)ethane
1,1-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane
trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane
gesapon
dedelo
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis-(4'-chlorophenyl)ethane (ddt)
1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethane-1,1-diyl)bis(4-chlorobenzene)
clofenotanum [inn-latin]
ddt [bsi:iso]
1,1,1-trichloor-2,2-bis(4-chloor fenyl)-ethaan [dutch]
neocid (van)
alpha,alpha-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-beta,beta,beta-trichloroethane
clofenotano [inn-spanish]
p'-zeidane [france]
epa pesticide chemical code 029201
1,1,1-tricloro-2,2-bis(4-cloro-fenil)-etano [italian]
ethane, 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)-
1,1,1-tricloro-2,2-bis(4-cloro-fenyl)-etano [italian]
azotox m 33
rcra waste number u061
neocidol (solid)
einecs 200-024-3
ccris 194
rcra waste no. u061
oms 0016 [french]
chlofenotan
detox (pesticide)
clofenotane technique
2,2,2-trichlorobis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4,4'-dichlorodiphenyl)ethane
hsdb 200
ent 1,506
nsc 8939
klorfenoton [swedish pharmacopoeia]
1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis(4-chlorobenzene)
1,1,1-trichlor-2,2-bis(4-chlor-phenyl)-aethan [german]
1,1-bis-(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane
ddt and metabolites
benzene, 1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis(4-chloro-
d.d.t. technique
chlorophenothanum technicum
chlorophenothanum
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-di(4-chlorophenyl)-ethane
benzochloryl
chlorophenothan
ddt 50 wp
brn 1882657
caswell no. 308
micro ddt 75
ai3-01506
ddt, p,p'-
SPECTRUM_001927
p,p'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
.alpha.,.beta.,.beta.-trichlorethane
p,p'-ddt
arkotine
didimac
dykol
agritan
neocidol, solid
guesarol
genitox
ppzeidan
tafidex
1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane
1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4,4'-dichlorodiphenyl)ethane
wln: gxggyr dg&r dg
azotox m-33
anofex
dodat
trichlorobis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
zeidane
rukseam
nci-c00464
santobane
parachlorocidum
chlorphenotoxum
ivoran
nsc-8939
citox
dicophane
bosan supra
neocid
1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane chlorophenothane
1,1-tricloro-2,2-bis(4-cloro-fenil)-etano
detoxan
nsc8939
ethane,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-
gesarol
pentachlorin
ixodex
gesafid
gyron
peb1
ent-1506
aavero-extra
chlorophenothane
1,1-trichloro-2,2-di(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
zerdane
azotox
trichlorobis(4'-chlorophenyl)ethane
bovidermol
benzene,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chloro-
ethane,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)-
pentech
kopsol
4,4'-ddt
didigam
deoval
1,1-trichlor-2,2-bis(4-chlor-phenyl)-aethan
clofenotan
estonate
4,4'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
mutoxan
penticidum
chlorphenotane
chlorphenothan
dibovin
detox
1,1-trichloor-2,2-bis(4-chloor fenyl)-ethaan
SPECTRUM5_002036
dichlorojiphinyltrichloroethane
D07367
clofenotane (inn)
BSPBIO_002477
NCGC00091071-01
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (ddt)
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis-(4'-chlorophenyl)ethane
C04623
50-29-3
DDT ,
clofenotane
inchi=1/c14h9cl5/c15-11-5-1-9(2-6-11)13(14(17,18)19)10-3-7-12(16)8-4-10/h1-8,13
4,4'-ddt, 98%
NCGC00091071-02
NCGC00091071-04
NCGC00091071-03
KBIO2_005030
KBIOSS_002469
KBIO2_002462
KBIO1_001598
KBIO3_001977
KBIO2_007598
KBIOGR_001197
SPECTRUM3_000859
SPBIO_001106
SPECPLUS_000558
SPECTRUM4_000699
SPECTRUM2_001233
SPECTRUM330070
NCGC00091071-05
AC-12071
penticide
CHEMBL416898
4,4-ddt
BMSE000634
AKOS003235691
NCGC00091071-07
NCGC00091071-06
NCGC00254176-01
tox21_300067
tox21_201495
NCGC00259046-01
T0379
cas-50-29-3
dtxsid4020375 ,
dtxcid20375
tox21_111076
clofenotanum
CCG-39114
bdbm50410508
chlorophenothane [nf]
klorfenoton
1,1,1-trichlor-2,2-bis(4-chlor-phenyl)-aethan
1,1,1-tricloro-2,2-bis(4-cloro-fenyl)-etano
clofenotane [inn]
1,1,1-trichloor-2,2-bis(4-chloor fenyl)-ethaan
oms 0016
unii-ciw5s16655
ciw5s16655 ,
1,1,1-tricloro-2,2-bis(4-cloro-fenil)-etano
clofenotano
p'-zeidane
2,2,2-trichloro-1,1-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
FT-0603206
ddt-
clofenotane [mart.]
ddt [hsdb]
clofenotane [who-dd]
ddt [mi]
ddt [hpus]
ddt [iso]
SCHEMBL7181
tox21_111076_1
NCGC00091071-08
ddt(p,p')
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-di(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
1,1'-(2,2,2,-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chlorobenzene]
1,1-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichioroethane
p,p'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloromethylmethane
1-chloro-4-[2,2,2-trichloro-1-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]benzene #
.alpha.,.alpha.-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-.beta.,.beta.,.beta.-trichlorethane
dicophaner
1,1,1-trichloro-2-2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane
benzene, 1,1'(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chloro-
4,4'-ddt, certified reference material, tracecert(r)
SR-01000883717-1
sr-01000883717
6wt ,
1-chloranyl-4-[2,2,2-tris(chloranyl)-1-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]benzene
4,4'-ddt, pestanal(r), analytical standard
4,4'-ddt d8
4,4'-ddt 100 microg/ml in cyclohexane
4,4'-ddt 10 microg/ml in cyclohexane
dicophane, ban
1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis(4-chlorobenzene), 9ci
1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis(4-chloro)-benzene
p,p'-ddt, bsi
2,2,2-trichloro-1,1-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)-ethane
1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane
p,p'-ddt 100 microg/ml in methanol
4,4'-(2,2,2-trichloroethane-1,1-diyl)bis(chlorobenzene)
DB13424
4,4'-ddt 1000 microg/ml in toluene
4,4'-ddt 5000 microg/ml in methanol
Q163648
4,4'-ddt (13c12)

Research Excerpts

Overview

DDT-21 is a promising candidate for the removal and/or detoxification of DDT in the environment. DDT appears to be an endocrine disruptor with responsive breast targets from in utero to menopause.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"DDT-21 is a promising candidate for the removal and/or detoxification of DDT in the environment."( Bioremediation characteristics, influencing factors of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) removal by using non-indigenous Paracoccus sp.
Al-Rashed, S; Bahkali, AH; Elgorban, AM; Marraiki, N; Prasad, KS; Shivamallu, C; Syed, A, 2021
)
1.56
"DDT is an endocrine disruptor chemical in experimental conditions, but little is known of adverse effects related to living conditions with continual uptake across a time span by all possible means of exposure."( Alterations in male reproductive hormones in relation to environmental DDT exposure.
Aneck-Hahn, N; Bornman, M; de Jager, C; Delport, R; Farías, P; Millar, RP; Patrick, S, 2018
)
1.44
"DDT appears to be an endocrine disruptor with responsive breast targets from in utero to menopause."( DDT and Breast Cancer: Prospective Study of Induction Time and Susceptibility Windows.
Cirillo, PM; Cohn, BA; Terry, MB, 2019
)
2.68
"DDT is a highly lipophilic molecule known to deplete membrane rafts of their phosphoglycolipid and cholesterol contents. "( The insecticide 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl) ethane (DDT) alters the membrane raft location of the TSH receptor stably expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells.
Belardinelli, MC; De Gregorio, F; Fausto, AM; Giorgi, F; Maggio, R; Pellegrino, M; Picchietti, S; Rossi, M; Taddei, AR, 2011
)
2.05
"DDT is a persistent organic pollutant pesticide, which can cause diseases like cancer, endocrine disorder, disruption of immune system, embryonic abnormality, reproductive disorder, etc."( Insecticide substitutes for DDT to control mosquitoes may be causes of several diseases.
Rahman, MM, 2013
)
1.41
"o,p'-DDT is an infamous xenoestrogen as well as a ubiquitous and persistent pollutant. "( Low concentrations of o,p'-DDT inhibit gene expression and prostaglandin synthesis by estrogen receptor-independent mechanism in rat ovarian cells.
Liu, J; Liu, W; Yang, Y; Zhao, M; Zhuang, S, 2012
)
1.19
"DDT is a persistent insecticide that was widely used in the world from the 1940s until the 70s, when it was banned in the United States and other countries. "( DDT reintroduction for malaria control: the cost-benefit debate for public health.
Asmus, CI; Guimarães, RM; Meyer, A, 2007
)
3.23
"1. DDT is a weak inhibitor of the ATPase of housefly muscle mitochondria in the absence of Mg2+ but an activator in the presence of Mg2+. "( The effect of DDT and related insecticides on the mitochondrial ATPase of houseflies.
Chefurka, W, 1983
)
1.25
"DDT is a pesticide used in malaria-control programmes throughout the world. "( Effects of long-term intake of DDT on rats.
Bronczyk, SA; Cabral, JR; Hall, RK; Rossi, L; Shubik, P, 1982
)
1.99
"DDT is a strong inhibitor of valinomycin-mediated K+ uptake and the corresponding H+ efflux and an inducer of K+ leakage out of mitochondria but not to any significant extent out of erythrocytes."( The effect of DDT on K+ transport in mouse liver mitochondria.
Bajura, ST; Chefurka, W; Zahradka, P, 1980
)
1.34
"DDT is a non-genotoxic carcinogen in animals and a mild hepatoxic agent."( DDT: Epidemiological evidence.
Higginson, J, 1985
)
2.43

Effects

DDT and p,p'-DDE have been detected previously at very high concentrations in the mid 1980s. DDT has been recommended as part of the arsenal of insecticides available for indoor residual spraying until suita.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"DDT has been used in India only: whereas in the 1990s a good effect could be measured, this effect waned over time."( Indoor residual spraying for the control of visceral leishmaniasis: A systematic review.
Faber, C; Horstick, O; Montenegro Quiñonez, C; Rahman, KM; Runge-Ranzinger, S, 2022
)
1.44
"DDT exposures have been previously shown to disrupt insulin signaling and glucoregulation, increasing risk for diabetes."( Tris(4-chlorophenyl)methane and tris(4-chlorophenyl)methanol disrupt pancreatic organogenesis and gene expression in zebrafish embryos.
Allsing, N; Bose, P; Cho, C; Grubschmidt, A; Khanum, S; Sant, KE; Wilson, PW, 2023
)
1.63
"DDT has been shown to disrupt secretory and morphogenetic processes in the adrenal cortex."( Developmental Exposure to DDT Disrupts Transcriptional Regulation of Postnatal Growth and Cell Renewal of Adrenal Medulla.
Chereshneva, EV; Ivanova, MY; Lomanovskaya, TA; Nazimova, SV; Obernikhin, SS; Timokhina, EP; Tsomartova, DA; Tsomartova, ES; Yaglov, VV; Yaglova, NV, 2023
)
1.93
"DDT has enjoyed the reputation of a successful pesticide in disease control programme and agricultural practices along with the serious opposition and ban later on due to its biomagnification and toxic action against non-target organisms. "( QSAR analyses of DDT analogues and their in silico validation using molecular docking study against voltage-gated sodium channel of Anopheles funestus.
Kumar, A; Saini, V, 2014
)
2.18
"DDT has been banned or severely restricted since peak use in the 1970s, implicating glacier meltwater as a likely source for DDT contamination in coastal Antarctic seas."( Melting glaciers: a probable source of DDT to the Antarctic marine ecosystem.
Cochran, MA; Dickhut, RM; Ducklow, HW; Fraser, WR; Geisz, HN, 2008
)
1.34
"Both DDT and p,p'-DDE have been detected previously at very high concentrations in the mid 1980s, with lower concentrations still being detectable as late as 2001."( The influence of non-toxic concentrations of DDT and DDE on the old world vulture estrogen receptor alpha.
Iguchi, T; Katsu, Y; Naidoo, V,
)
0.85
"DDT has been found in soil, water, and air samples. "( Contents and sources of DDT impurities in dicofol formulations in Turkey.
Cutright, TJ; Gokbulut, C; Turgut, C, 2009
)
2.1
"DDT has the longest residence time in almost all compartments."( Global environmental cycling of gamma-HCH and DDT in the 1980s--a study using a coupled atmosphere and ocean general circulation model.
Guglielmo, F; Lammel, G; Maier-Reimer, E, 2009
)
1.33
"DDT has been recommended as part of the arsenal of insecticides available for indoor residual spraying until suitable alternatives are available. "( Global status of DDT and its alternatives for use in vector control to prevent disease.
van den Berg, H, 2009
)
2.14
"DDT exposure has drastic effects on reproductive functions in vertebrates, and safer alternatives should be considered rather than re-introducing DDT as a control agent for mosquitoes as has been suggested recently."( Dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane (DDT) and its observed effects on body functions in vertebrates.
Abraham, C; Ambrose, K; Charles, N; Kiriamiti, K; Milton, M, 2011
)
2.09
"DDT has been used in Ecuador since 1946 with great success, particularly in the control of rural plague; it is systematically applied every four months in areas considered to be plague foci."( DDT in the prevention of plague in Ecuador.
SAENZ VERA, C, 1953
)
2.4
"DDT has estrogenic potential, and the main metabolite, p,p'-dichlorodiphenyl-dichloroethylene (p,p'-DDE), is a potent antiandrogen."( Impaired semen quality associated with environmental DDT exposure in young men living in a malaria area in the Limpopo Province, South Africa.
Aneck-Hahn, NH; Bornman, MS; de Jager, C; Farias, P; Schulenburg, GW,
)
1.1
"DDT (which has estrogenic properties) increases progesterone secretion and consequently decreases hCG secretion."( Time-dependent action of DDT (1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane) and its metabolite DDE (1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene) on human chorionic gonadotropin and progesterone secretion.
Gregoraszczuk, EŁ; Milewicz, T; Wójtowicz, AK, 2008
)
1.37
"DDT, DDE, and DDD have been detected at elevated concentrations in sediments and fish of the Yakima River, its tributaries and drainages. "( Determination of a tolerable daily intake of DDT for consumers of DDT contaminated fish from the lower Yakima River, Washington.
Laflamme, DM; Mariën, K, 1995
)
1.99
"DDT has systematically been used in sanitation campaigns against malaria in Mexico. "( Exposure assessment for workers applying DDT to control malaria in Veracruz, Mexico.
Borja-Aburto, VH; Cruz, V; Rios, C; Rivero-Rodriguez, L; Santos-Burgoa, C; Waliszewskiy, S, 1997
)
2.01
"DDT has the highest activity to stimulate uterine weight whereas BPA and DAI turned out to be less potent."( Ability of xeno- and phytoestrogens to modulate expression of estrogen-sensitive genes in rat uterus: estrogenicity profiles and uterotropic activity.
Diel, P; Michna, H; Schulz, T; Smolnikar, K; Strunck, E; Vollmer, G, 2000
)
1.03
"DDT has been shown to have immunotoxic effects in mice and to increase susceptibility to intracellular pathogens such as Mycobacterium leprae."( DDT inhibits the functional activation of murine macrophages and decreases resistance to infection by Mycobacterium microti.
Calderon-Aranda, ES; Estrada, I; Nuñez G, MA, 2002
)
2.48

Actions

DDT and DDE increase amyloid precursor protein levels, providing mechanistic plausibility for the association of DDE exposure with AD. DDT did not inhibit [35S] TBPS binding, suggesting that DDT resistance is not due to changes at the TBPS receptor.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"DDT was found to inhibit the synthesis of tyrosine hydroxylase and affect the mitochondrial apparatus of epinephrine-producing cells during puberty and even after maturation."( Impact of Prenatal and Postnatal Exposure to Endocrine Disrupter DDT on Adrenal Medulla Function.
Chereshneva, EV; Ivanova, MY; Lomanovskaya, TA; Nazimova, SV; Obernikhin, SS; Timokhina, EP; Tsomartova, DA; Tsomartova, ES; Yaglov, VV; Yaglova, NV, 2022
)
1.68
"Both DDT and DDE increase amyloid precursor protein levels, providing mechanistic plausibility for the association of DDE exposure with AD."( Elevated serum pesticide levels and risk for Alzheimer disease.
Buckley, B; Gearing, M; German, DC; Hossain, MM; Levey, AI; Richardson, JR; Roy, A; Shalat, SL; von Stein, RT, 2014
)
0.86
"This DDT-mediated increase in HRE activity was augmented by the coactivator CBP (CREB-binding protein) and was dependent on the p38 pathway."( The organochlorine o,p'-DDT plays a role in coactivator-mediated MAPK crosstalk in MCF-7 breast cancer cells.
Bratton, MR; Burow, ME; Frigo, DE; McLachlan, JA; Nephew, KP; Segar, HC; Wiese, TE, 2012
)
1.14
"The DDT removal was slower with FeS than with Fe(0), but the amounts of DDD and DDE produced did not exceed baseline."( Abiotic transformation of DDT in aqueous solutions.
Hundal, LS; Pirnie, EF; Talley, JW, 2006
)
1.11
"SigmaDDT levels were lower than in other studies in Mexico, but 36% of the samples exceeded the JMPR-FAO/WHO acceptable daily intake (ADI)."( Organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls levels in human milk from Chelem, Yucatán, México.
Alvarado-Mejía, J; Ceja-Moreno, V; Gold-Bouchot, G; González-Navarrete, RL; Rodas-Ortíz, JP; Rodríguez-Hernández, ME, 2008
)
0.8
"DDT was lower in milk and crucian carp than in the soil near the chemical plant."( Exposure of mother-child and postpartum woman-infant pairs to DDT and its metabolites in Tianjin, China.
Li, CL; Li, H; Li, JG; Liu, J; Wang, Q; Wang, YR; Yang, DY; Yang, XY; Zhang, M, 2008
)
1.31
"DDT may inhibit DMBA-induced mammary tumors and leukemia by stimulating hepatic metabolism and excretion of DMBA so that less carcinogen is available to peripheral tissues."( Protection by 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDT) against mammary tumors and leukemia during prolonged feeding of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene to female rats.
Okey, AB; Silinskas, KC, 1975
)
1.22
"DDT did not inhibit [35S] TBPS binding, suggesting that DDT resistance is not due to changes at the TBPS receptor."( Role of the brain t-butylbicyclophosphorothionate receptor in vertebrate resistance to endrin, 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane and cypermethrin.
Bonner, JC; Yarbrough, JD, 1989
)
1

Treatment

DDT and DDE treatment also altered Myostatin expression, phosphorylation of protein kinase B, p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase, forkhead box O protein 3. DDT-treated 8-day rabbit conceptuses were smaller than controls and showed abnormal persistence of preimplantation proteins in the yolk sac fluid.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"DDT and DDE treatment also altered Myostatin expression, phosphorylation of protein kinase B, p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase, forkhead box O protein 3 and mammalian target of rapamycin, resulting in attenuation of myotube formation."( 4,4'-Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE) inhibit myogenesis in C2C12 myoblasts.
Clark, JM; Kim, J; Kim, Y; Park, MY; Park, Y; Whang, KY; Yoon, KS, 2017
)
1.45
"p,p'-DDT treatment elevated the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, induced mitochondrial membrane potential, and released cytochrome c into the cytosol, with subsequent elevations of Bax and p53, along with suppression of Bcl-2."( Protective efficacy of vitamins C and E on p,p'-DDT-induced cytotoxicity via the ROS-mediated mitochondrial pathway and NF-κB/FasL pathway.
Chen, M; Cheng, L; Jin, X; Li, Z; Liu, X; Ren, H; Song, L, 2014
)
1.11
"DDT treatment induces phosphorylation of ERK and p38, while JNK phosphorylation levels are slightly decreased."( Mechanism of AP-1-mediated gene expression by select organochlorines through the p38 MAPK pathway.
Alam, J; Beckman, BS; Burow, ME; Frigo, DE; McLachlan, JA; Scandurro, AB; Tang, Y, 2004
)
1.04
"When DDT was treated with a molar excess of NaOH ([NaOH]/[DDT]=9) in the alcohol mixture at room temperature, DDT disappeared within 15min."( Complete dechlorination of DDT and its metabolites in an alcohol mixture using NaOH and Pd/C catalyst.
Ukisu, Y, 2008
)
1.1
"DDT treatment also increases the activity of the pentose phosphate shunt as measured by the activity of G6PD and 6PGD."( The effect of DDT on the polymorphism at the G6pd and Pgd loci in Drosophila melanogaster.
Bijlsma, R; Kerver, JW, 1983
)
1.35
"o,p'-DDT treatment increased the level of cytoplasmic progestin receptors by 43% compared with that in oil-injected controls."( 1-(o-Chlorophenyl)-1 (p-chlorophenyl)2,2,2-trichloroethane induces functional progestin receptors in the rat hypothalamus and pituitary gland.
Blaustein, JD; Brown, TJ, 1984
)
0.72
"DDT-treated 8-day rabbit conceptuses were smaller than controls and showed abnormal persistence of preimplantation proteins in the yolk sac fluid."( Chemical exposure of embryos during the preimplantation stages of pregnancy: mortality rate and intrauterine development.
Dames, NM; Fabro, S; McLachlan, JA, 1984
)
0.99
"DDT- and DDD-treated animals also excreted small amounts of DDD, 1-chloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethene, 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis-(p-chlorophenyl)ethene, 2-hydroxy-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)acetic acid, and 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethanol."( Metabolism of 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDT), 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane, and 1-chloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethene in the hamster.
Brunk, G; Gold, B, 1983
)
1.23
"In DDT-treated rats, the seminal vesicles weights dropped significantly, resulting from a decrease of testosterone production by testes, whereas serum LH and FSH increased after pesticide exposure."( Reproductive toxicity of DDT in adult male rats.
Ben Rhouma, K; Krichah, R; Sakly, M; Tébourbi, O, 2001
)
1.13
"In DDT-treated rats, thiamine levels in blood, brain and liver decreased, transketolase activity in brain and liver decreased and TPP effect in brain and liver increased."( Thiamine deficiency induced by polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) administration to rats.
Itokawa, Y; Kamohara, K; Yagi, N,
)
0.86
"p,p'-DDT-treated rats had increased concentrations of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in seven regional areas, but serotonin was increased only in the midbrain and cerebellum."( p,p'-DDT-induced neurotoxic syndrome: experimental myoclonus.
Hwang, EC; Van Woert, MH, 1978
)
1.23
"Yet DDT pretreatment increased mouse liver binding of DDVP."( DDVP (dichlorvos) detoxification by binding and interactions with DDT, dieldrin, and malaoxon.
Cohen, SD; Ehrich, M, 1977
)
0.97
"DDT-treated rats had a significantly lower mammary tumor incidence, prolonged tumor latency period, and fewer tumors per rat than did the control group."( Protection by 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDT) against mammary tumors and leukemia during prolonged feeding of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene to female rats.
Okey, AB; Silinskas, KC, 1975
)
1.22
"DDT treatment resulted in lower serum and liver cholesterol and serum insulin levels in sedentary rats."( Effect of exercise on the responses of rats to DDT.
Berdanier, CD; de Dennis, SK, 1977
)
1.24
"DDT-treated females had their first estrous cycles 2 to 3 months earlier (P less than .001) than the control dogs."( Effects of DDT on reproduction in multiple generations of beagle dogs.
Bissell, GD; Hexter, AC; Ottoboni, A, 1977
)
1.37
"DDT treatment caused increased absorption of isoniazid."( Effect of subacute DDT on pharmacokinetics of isoniazid and liver function in rabbits.
Agarwal, AK; Chugh, Y; Sankaranarayanan, A; Sharma, PL, 1990
)
1.33
"DDT treatments of ticks at points 3 and 5 were highly effective; this was expressed by a reduction in weight of the engorged females and a suppression of their fecundity at point 3, and death of all the larvae at different times after hatching at point 5."( Comparison of the effects of Altozar and DDT on females of Ixodes persulcatus Sch. during and after feeding.
Joffe, ID; Uspenskiy, IV, 1985
)
1.26
"Treatment of DDT or DDE resulted in increased lipid accumulation accompanied by increased expression of CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein α (C/EBPα), peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor-γ (PPARγ), fatty acid synthase (FAS), acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), adipose triglyceride lipase, and leptin."( 4,4'-Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE) promote adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 adipocyte cell culture.
Kim, J; Marshall Clark, J; Park, Y; Sun, Q; Whang, KY; Yoon, KS; Yue, Y, 2016
)
1.06
"Treatment with DDT, MTC, DES, or E2 increased cellular Ca uptake, and the expression of trophoblast-specific human Ca binding protein (HCaBP) was down-regulated by both MTC and DDT."( Estrogenic endocrine disruptive components interfere with calcium handling and differentiation of human trophoblast cells.
Awumey, EM; Derfoul, A; Hall, DJ; Kolodzeski, T; Lin, FJ; Tuan, RS, 2003
)
0.66
"Treatment of DDT with Fe(0) and FeS resulted in approximately 88% and 56% transformation of DDT within 150h, respectively."( Abiotic transformation of DDT in aqueous solutions.
Hundal, LS; Pirnie, EF; Talley, JW, 2006
)
0.99
"Treatment with DDT or DDE caused eggshell thinning in ducks but not in chickens; however, treatment with DDT or DDE did not alter significantly the percentage of radiocalcium that appeared in eggshells of either species."( Calcium-45 uptake by shell gland, oviduct, plasma and eggshell of DDT-dosed ducks and chickens.
Davison, KL, 1978
)
0.83
"The treatment of DDT and endosulfan significantly increased the PC contents and the incorporation of radioactive [methyl-3H]choline into PC of lung and liver microsomes."( Induction of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis via CDPcholine pathway in lung and liver of rats following intratracheal administration of DDT and endosulfan.
Dani, HM; Misra, UK; Narayan, S, 1989
)
0.81
"Treatment with DDT, after three days, induces in Carassius hepatocytes a loss of glycogen granules, an increase of ergastoplasm, a mitochondrial swelling and wide cytoplasmic vacuoles."( [Effect of DDT on hepatocytes in Ictalurus sp. and Carassius carassius].
Baruffaldi, A; Cucchi, C, 1989
)
1.01

Toxicity

The purpose of this study was to identify, appraise and synthesise evidence about the chronic adverse effects of long-term exposure to DDT in children. The p, p'-DDT isomer is several times as toxic as the o,p'-DDt isomer to both goldfish a.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" This may lead to the persistence, in food offered for human consumption, of residues which may be potentially toxic under conditions of repeated absorption over the greater part of the life span."( [Toxicity by relay. I. General principles of a new method for the assessment of Toxicity of addivitives to animal feeds].
Ferrando, R; Truhaut, R, 1975
)
0.25
"The toxic and carcinogenic effects of many compounds depend on their activation to reactive molecules in the cytochrome P-450 system of the endoplasmic reticulum of cells."( Diet, DDT, and the toxicity of drugs and chemicals.
McLean, AE, 1977
)
0.74
" The results suggest that the acute toxic effects of DDT are species-dependent and the administration route is important in DDT toxicity."( Effect of administration route on DDT on acute toxicity and on drug biotransformation in various rodents.
Vainio, H, 1976
)
0.78
" In addition, their critical effects, the no-observed-effect levels and the size of the safety/uncertainty factors used are also listed to illustrate the diversity of the toxic effects and the resulting assessments."( Safety/risk assessment of pesticides: principles, procedures and examples.
Dourson, ML; Lu, FC, 1992
)
0.28
" DDT metabolism in a North American species of planarian leads to the formation of metabolites more toxic than the parent compound."( Comparative acute toxicity of DDT metabolites among American and European species of planarians.
Bonner, JC; Wells, MR, 1987
)
1.47
"We discuss the physicochemical basis for mechanisms of action of toxic chemicals and theoretical methods that can be used to understand the relation to the structure of these chemicals."( Determinants of molecular reactivity as criteria for predicting toxicity: problems and approaches.
Liebman, MN; Osman, R; Rabinowitz, J; Weinstein, H, 1985
)
0.27
"The studies reviewed in this paper were undertaken at the request of the World Health Organization to obtain information on pesticides that would be least toxic for use in countries where the diet is deficient in protein."( Dietary protein and pesticide toxicity in male weanling rats.
Boyd, EM, 1969
)
0.25
" These TD25 values were compared with LD50 values obtained from the literature and a correlation was found."( Acute toxicity of organic solvents, heavy metals and DDT tested in cultures of mouse neuroblastoma cells.
Lewné, M; Peterson, A; Walum, E, 1981
)
0.51
" Because the regulation of the lipid composition of the membrane is a common strategy in response to adverse growth conditions, we studied the effects of DDE on the lipid composition and the consequent alterations of membrane physical properties in comparison to the parental compound DDT."( Membrane lipid composition of Bacillus stearothermophilus as affected by lipophilic environmental pollutants: an approach to membrane toxicity assessment.
Antunes-Madeira, MC; Donato, MM; Jurado, AS; Madeira, VM, 2000
)
0.48
" The toxic effect of DDT and CLO were evaluated on the o-demethylase (OD) and acethycholinesterase activities (AchA) of the cladoceran Daphnia magna exposed to different concentrations of the insecticides solved in water from three sites."( [Toxic effect of DDT, chlordane and water from the Ignacio Ramírez dam (Mexico), on Daphnia magna (Crustacea: Daphnidae)].
Galar Martínez, M; López López, E; Martínez-Tabche, L; Romero Solís, M, 1999
)
0.96
" Thus, the toxicity using EqP pore-water toxic units (TUs) was evaluated for DDT and its degradation product, dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane (DDD), as the ratio of the predicted interstitial water concentration divided by the water-only LC50 values."( Toxicity and bioaccumulation of DDT in freshwater amphipods in exposures to spiked sediments.
Gedeon, ML; Landrum, PF; Lotufo, GR, 2001
)
0.82
" It is concluded that DDT induced adverse effects on male rat fertility by acting directly on the testes and altering the neuroendocrine function."( Reproductive toxicity of DDT in adult male rats.
Ben Rhouma, K; Krichah, R; Sakly, M; Tébourbi, O, 2001
)
0.93
" Increases in the absolute and relative (ratio to body weight) liver weights were observed as a typical toxic response after a single or repeated exposure to DDT."( A comparative study on the reliablility of toxicokinetic parameters for predicting hepatotoxicity of DDT in rats receiving a single or repeated administration.
Harada, T; Kobayashi, H; Takeda, M; Tomiyama, N; Watanabe, M, 2003
)
0.73
" To confirm the reliability of AUC for predicting toxic responses at different dose levels, we conducted a further 28-day repeated dose study of p,p'-DDT in male F344 rats at dietary levels of 50, 160, and 500 ppm."( A further study on the reliability of toxicokinetic parameters for predicting hepatotoxicity in rats receiving a 28-day repeated administration of DDT.
Harada, T; Kobayashi, H; Takeda, M; Tomiyama, N; Watanabe, M, 2004
)
0.72
" The mean ERMq without DDT had a better ability to predict toxic samples than the mean ERMq with DDT."( Comparative sediment quality guideline performance for predicting sediment toxicity in southern California, USA.
Bay, SM; Vidal, DE, 2005
)
0.64
" Toxic effects of cadmium (inorganic metal), DDT (organochlorine pesticide), and fluoranthene (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon) exposure in sediments (10-day) and seawater (24-h) on juvenile (212-350-microm) hard clams Mercenaria mercenaria were determined."( Use of the juvenile clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, as a sensitive indicator of aqueous and sediment toxicity.
Chung, KW; Fulton, MH; Scott, GI, 2007
)
0.6
" Median lethal concentrations (LC50), "incipient" LC50, median lethal time (LT50) the "maximum acceptable concentration of the toxic compound" (MACT) and "the safety level" (SL) were determined."( [Toxic effect of DDT and endosulfan in white shrimp postlarvae Litopenaeus vannamei (Decapoda: Penaeidae) from Chiapas, Mexico].
Castro-Castro, V; González-Huerta, LV; Siu-Rodas, Y; Sokolov, MY,
)
0.47
" The bioassay results showed that PAHs and DDTs were toxic to microalgae in a 4-day exposure tests but not to seed germination of ryegrass (Lolium perenne)."( Comparative toxicity of hydrophobic contaminants to microalgae and higher plants.
Cheung, KC; Chung, MK; Hu, R; Wong, MH, 2007
)
0.6
"The p, p'-DDT isomer is several times as toxic as the o,p'-DDT isomer to both goldfish and mosquito larvae."( Comparative Toxicity of DDT Isomers and Related Compounds to Mosquito Larvae and Fish.
Ginsburg, JM, 1947
)
0.94
" The interaction of p,p'-DDT and nano-TiO(2) at low concentrations may alter toxic response relative to nano-TiO(2) or p,p'-DDT alone."( Synergistic genotoxicity caused by low concentration of titanium dioxide nanoparticles and p,p'-DDT in human hepatocytes.
Jiang, M; Lu, B; Shi, Y; Tan, HQ; Zhang, JH; Zhu, LH, 2010
)
0.88
" aegypti resting sites are treated with chemicals, even at reduced treatment coverage area, mosquitoes do not simply move to safe sites (untreated areas) following contact with the treated material."( Effects of irritant chemicals on Aedes aegypti resting behavior: is there a simple shift to untreated "safe sites"?
Achee, NL; Arce, LM; Foggie, T; Grieco, JP; Manda, H; Shah, P, 2011
)
0.37
"We investigated the usefulness of an integrated computational systems biology approach in a case study involving the isomers and metabolites of the pesticide dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) to ascertain their possible links to relevant adverse effects."( Application of computational systems biology to explore environmental toxicity hazards.
Audouze, K; Grandjean, P, 2011
)
0.56
" Compared with the reported DDT levels demonstrated to have toxic effects on frogs, DDTs in the present frogs are unlikely to constitute an immediate health risk."( DDTs in rice frogs (Rana limnocharis) from an agricultural site, South China: tissue distribution, biomagnification, and potential toxic effects assessment.
Chen, SJ; Luo, XJ; Mai, BX; Wu, JP; Zhang, Y, 2012
)
2.12
" It has been shown in the literature that equilibrium SPME fiber concentrations reflect the bioavailable concentrations of hydrophobic contaminants, so these fiber concentrations should be a useful metric for assessing toxic effects from the bioavailable contaminant providing a framework to expand the use of SPME fibers beyond estimation of bioaccumulation."( Use of solid phase microextraction to estimate toxicity: relating fiber concentrations to toxicity--part I.
Ding, Y; Harwood, AD; Landrum, PF; Lydy, MJ; You, J, 2012
)
0.38
" The present study extends the use of fiber concentrations to organism body residues to specifically address biotransformation and provide the link to toxic response."( Use of solid phase microextraction to estimate toxicity: relating fiber concentrations to body residues--part II.
Ding, Y; Harwood, AD; Landrum, PF; Lydy, MJ; You, J, 2012
)
0.38
" A toxic unit-based fiber LC50 value represented the DDT mixture (DDT and DDD) toxicity for both species."( Assessing bioavailability and toxicity of permethrin and DDT in sediment using matrix solid phase microextraction.
Ding, Y; Landrum, PF; Lydy, MJ; You, J, 2013
)
0.88
" To investigate the combined toxic effects of pesticide cocktails previously identified in the French diet, we first studied the cytotoxicity induced by seven cocktails composed of two to six pesticides on human hepatic (HepG2) and colon (Caco-2) cell lines using the MTT and neutral red uptake assays."( In vitro combined cytotoxic effects of pesticide cocktails simultaneously found in the French diet.
Fessard, V; Le Hégarat, L; Sanders, P; Takakura, N, 2013
)
0.39
" They are condemned for health adverse effects such as cancer, reproductive defects, neurobehavioral abnormalities, endocrine and immunological toxicity."( Persistent organochlorinated pesticides and mechanisms of their toxicity.
Brambilla, G; Colosio, C; Moretto, A; Mrema, EJ; Rubino, FM; Tsatsakis, AM, 2013
)
0.39
" Severe negative effects of nZVI were observed on both test organisms after 7 d incubation, but prolonged incubation led to oxidation of nZVI which reduced its toxic effects on the tested organisms."( Effects of nano-sized zero-valent iron (nZVI) on DDT degradation in soil and its toxicity to collembola and ostracods.
El-Temsah, YS; Joner, EJ, 2013
)
0.64
" In general, the toxicity of DDXs (DDT and its metabolites) and copper acted independently and copper was more toxic to the lugworms at environmentally relevant concentrations."( Joint toxicity of sediment-associated DDT and copper to a polychaete, Nereis succinea.
Qi, HX; Wang, F; You, J, 2015
)
0.97
" For desired toxic effect of an insecticide, apart from other behavioural aspects, toxicity and chemical nature of the molecule are important that may cause irritability in the mosquito to the insecticide affecting the uptake."( Chlorfenapyr: irritant effect compared to other insecticides and its intrinsic toxicity in multiple-insecticide-susceptible and -resistant Anopheles stephensi (Diptera: Culicidae).
Agrawal, OP; Elamathi, N; Raghavendra, K; Sreehari, U; Velamuri, PS; Verma, V, 2015
)
0.42
" The purpose of this study was to identify, appraise and synthesise evidence about the chronic adverse effects of long-term exposure to DDT in children, 0-18 years, in zones where IRS is practised, in order to contribute to informing policy decisions."( Chronic adverse effects of long-term exposure of children to dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) through indoor residual spraying: A systematic review.
Evans, D; Osunkentan, AO,
)
0.55
"Empirically, insufficient evidence exists with regard to the chronic adverse effects of long-term exposure of children to DDT through IRS."( Chronic adverse effects of long-term exposure of children to dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) through indoor residual spraying: A systematic review.
Evans, D; Osunkentan, AO,
)
0.56
"Despite the diversity of studies on pesticide toxicities, there is a serious lack of information concerning the toxic effect of pesticides mixtures."( Metabolomics-on-a-chip approach to study hepatotoxicity of DDT, permethrin and their mixtures.
Fleury, MJ; Gilard, F; Jellali, R; Leclerc, E; Legallais, C; Legendre, A; Pandolfi, V; Paullier, P, 2018
)
0.72
" Toxicological assays on fish cell lines are commonly used as an alternative tool to provide fast and reliable assessment of the toxic and ecotoxic properties of chemicals or mixtures."( Toxicity assessment of pollutants sorbed on environmental sample microplastics collected on beaches: Part I-adverse effects on fish cell line.
Bourgeois, JP; Cachot, J; Clérandeau, C; de Alencastro, LF; Faure, F; Levasseur, C; Morin, B; Pannetier, P; Sciacca, F; Van Arkel, K, 2019
)
0.51
" Predicted toxic units of DDX in porewater were utilized to distinguish between toxicity from DDT and that of DDD and DDE."( Full-Life Cycle Toxicity Assessment of Sediment-Bound DDT and Its Degradation Products on Chironomus dilutus.
Li, H; Ma, P; You, J, 2019
)
0.98
"Worldwide the use of pesticides has increased, especially in the industry and agriculture sector even though they contain highly toxic substances."( A lentic microcosm approach to determine the toxicity of DDT and deltamethrin on diatom communities.
Kock, A; Smit, NJ; Taylor, JC; Wepener, V; Wolmarans, NJ, 2022
)
0.97
"Pesticides are prevalent pollutants found in river sediments in agricultural regions worldwide, leading to environmental pollution and toxic effects on biota."( Pesticides in sediments from Magdalena River, Colombia, are linked to reproductive toxicity on Caenorhabditis elegans.
Aga, D; Noguera, K; Olivero-Verbel, J; Tejeda-Benítez, L, 2023
)
0.91

Pharmacokinetics

The method was proved to be applicable to the pharmacokinetic study of DDT in rats after a single oral administration. The rats received a continuous intravenous infusion ofDDT (10 mg/h) until onset of a predefined pharmacodynamic endpoint (facial muscle tremor).

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" The findings illustrate the importance of knowing the pharmacokinetic properties of the compound in question, as well as standardization of such variables whenever direct comparisons of dose levels are conducted."( The influence of dosing volume on the toxicity of p,p'-DDT.
McDaniel, KL; Moser, VC, 1997
)
0.54
" The method was proved to be applicable to the pharmacokinetic study of DDT in rats after a single oral administration."( High-performance liquid chromatographic method for determination of DDT and its degradation products in rat plasma, liver and brain: validation and application to a pharmacokinetic study.
Harada, T; Kobayashi, H; Takeda, M; Tomiyama, N; Tsuji, H; Watanabe, M, 2000
)
0.77
" The rats received a continuous intravenous infusion of DDT (10 mg/h) until onset of a predefined pharmacodynamic endpoint (facial muscle tremor)."( The effect of a high-fat meal on the pharmacodynamics of a model lipophilic compound that binds extensively to triglyceride-rich lipoproteins.
Gershkovich, P; Hoffman, A; Shtainer, D, 2007
)
0.59
"Physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling in marine mammals is a challenge because of the lack of parameter information and the ban on exposure experiments."( Application of Bayesian population physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling and Markov chain Monte Carlo simulations to pesticide kinetics studies in protected marine mammals: DDT, DDE, and DDD in harbor porpoises.
Blust, R; Covaci, A; Das, K; Weijs, L; Yang, RS, 2013
)
0.58
"To document serum p,p'-DDT/E levels in 47 mothers and children participating in the Venda Health Examination of Mothers, Babies and their Environment (VHEMBE), a study conducted in an area where IRS insecticides are used annually, and to evaluate the precision and accuracy of a published pharmacokinetic model for the estimation of children's p,p'-DDT/E levels."( Early-life exposure to p,p'-DDT and p,p'-DDE in South African children participating in the VHEMBE study: An assessment using repeated serum measurements and pharmacokinetic modeling.
Bornman, R; Chevrier, J; Eskenazi, B; Ngueta, G; Rauch, S; Verner, MA, 2018
)
1.09
" A pharmacokinetic model of gestational and lactational exposure was used to estimate children's p,p'-DDT/E levels during pregnancy and the first two years of life, and estimated levels were compared to measured levels."( Early-life exposure to p,p'-DDT and p,p'-DDE in South African children participating in the VHEMBE study: An assessment using repeated serum measurements and pharmacokinetic modeling.
Bornman, R; Chevrier, J; Eskenazi, B; Ngueta, G; Rauch, S; Verner, MA, 2018
)
0.99
" The pharmacokinetic model may be useful to estimate children's levels in the VHEMBE population."( Early-life exposure to p,p'-DDT and p,p'-DDE in South African children participating in the VHEMBE study: An assessment using repeated serum measurements and pharmacokinetic modeling.
Bornman, R; Chevrier, J; Eskenazi, B; Ngueta, G; Rauch, S; Verner, MA, 2018
)
0.77

Compound-Compound Interactions

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"The goal of the present study was to investigate the feasibility of silicon dioxide (SiO(2)) microspheres without special modification to enrich dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and its main metabolites, p,p'-dichlorodiphenyl-2,2-dichloroethylene (p,p'-DDD) and p,p'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE) in combination with gas chromatography-electron-capture detection."( Solid phase extraction with silicon dioxide microsphere adsorbents in combination with gas chromatography-electron capture detection for the determination of DDT and its metabolites in water samples.
Wu, W; Xie, G; Zhou, Q, 2013
)
0.78

Bioavailability

DDTr (DDTr = DDT + DDD + DDE) relative bioavailability in historically contaminated soils (n = 7) was assessed using an in vivo mouse model. No information on the species sensitivity distribution (SSD) of crops with regard to DDTs has been reported.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" We also quantified the levels of phytoestrogens in extracts of some common foods, herbs, and spices and in human saliva following consumption of a high phytoestrogen food source (soy milk) to compare phytoestrogen abundance and bioavailability relative to the reported xenoestrogen burden in humans."( Estrogenic activity of natural and synthetic estrogens in human breast cancer cells in culture.
Blen, M; Duwe, G; Zava, DT, 1997
)
0.3
" To investigate a potential mechanism for the interaction of contaminants with the endocrine system, we evaluated the cellular bioavailability of numerous chemicals."( Cellular bioavailability of natural hormones and environmental contaminants as a function of serum and cytosolic binding factors.
Arnold, SF; Crain, DA; Guillette, LJ; McLachlan, JA; Noriega, N; Vonier, PM,
)
0.13
" The results clearly demonstrate that the differing impact of protein binding on the bioavailability of chemicals considerably influences their nominal and relative potencies in the presence of albumin."( Factors influencing nominal effective concentrations of chemical compounds in vitro: medium protein concentration.
Gülden, M; Mörchel, S; Seibert, H, 2002
)
0.31
" Ageing may increase risk of Parkinson's disease by altering hepatic detoxification and increasing systemic bioavailability of neurotoxins."( Age-related alteration in hepatic disposition of the neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine and pesticides.
Le Couteur, DG; McLean, AJ; Yang, MC, 2002
)
0.31
"An accelerated solvent extraction (ASE) procedure using water, n-hexane and a mixture of n-hexane and acetone as solvents in sequence was developed and tested to evaluate the bioavailability of DDT and its metabolites including p,p'-DDT, o,p'-DDT, p,p'-DDE, and p,p'-DDD (SigmaDDTs) to wheat uptake from soils characterized by varied organic carbon contents."( Use of sequential ASE extraction to evaluate the bioavailability of DDT and its metabolites to wheat roots in soils with various organic carbon contents.
Cao, J; Dawson, R; Guo, LQ; Ju, TZ; Li, BG; Liu, WX; Tao, S; Wang, XJ; Xu, FL, 2004
)
0.75
"This study was conducted to find an appropriate approach for the assessment of bioavailability of DDTs in soil to both earthworm and vegetables."( Using matrix solid-phase microextraction (matrix-SPME) to estimate bioavailability of DDTs in soil to both earthworm and vegetables.
Chu, X; Fang, H; Pang, G; Wang, X; Yu, Y, 2010
)
0.8
"The rapid-desorbing fraction plays an important role in the bioavailability of organic pollutants in soil."( Tenax TA extraction to assess the bioavailability of DDTs in cotton field soils.
Gu, C; Jiang, X; Wang, F; Yang, X, 2010
)
0.61
" In general, concentrations of Σ6 PCBs in mussels were higher than their corresponding sediment concentrations reflecting their relatively high bioavailability and bioaccumulative potential."( Risk posed by chlorinated organic compounds in Abu Qir Bay, East Alexandria, Egypt.
Bahadir, M; El-Fiky, A; Khairy, MA; Kolb, M; Mostafa, AR, 2012
)
0.38
"In this study, DDTr (DDTr = DDT + DDD + DDE) relative bioavailability in historically contaminated soils (n = 7) was assessed using an in vivo mouse model."( Assessment of DDT relative bioavailability and bioaccessibility in historically contaminated soils using an in vivo mouse model and fed and unfed batch in vitro assays.
Gancarz, D; Juhasz, AL; Naidu, R; Rofe, A; Smith, E; Weber, J, 2012
)
1.09
" The bioavailability of p,p'-DDE, p,p'-DDT, As, Cd, Cu, and Pb from five field-aged New Zealand orchards and three grazing soils was assessed by using a 28-d bioassay with Aporrectodea caliginosa and chemical assays."( Comparison of earthworm and chemical assays of the bioavailability of aged 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene, 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane, and heavy metals in orchard soils.
Gaw, S; Jensen, J; Kim, N; Northcott, G; Wilkins, A, 2012
)
0.65
"Matrix solid phase microextraction (matrix-SPME) was evaluated as a surrogate for the absorbed dose in organisms to estimate bioavailability and toxicity of permethrin and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in laboratory-spiked sediment."( Assessing bioavailability and toxicity of permethrin and DDT in sediment using matrix solid phase microextraction.
Ding, Y; Landrum, PF; Lydy, MJ; You, J, 2013
)
0.82
" Results from the present study clearly demonstrated the feasibility of coupling PRCs with SPME sampling to greatly shorten sampling time, thus affording much improved flexibility in the use of SPME for bioavailability evaluation."( Assessing bioavailability of DDT and metabolites in marine sediments using solid-phase microextraction with performance reference compounds.
Bao, LJ; Crago, J; Gan, J; Jia, F; Schlenk, D; Zeng, EY, 2013
)
0.68
" It thus appeared that biodegradation of DDTr adsorbed on soil was severely limited and controlled by desorption and consequent bioavailability of DDTr in the aqueous phase."( Impact of addition of amendments on the degradation of DDT and its residues partitioned on soil.
Bhalekar, S; Bose, P; Guha, S; Gurjar, SK; Singh, SP, 2013
)
0.9
"In situ measurements of hydrophobic organic chemicals in sediment porewater, a central component in assessing the bioavailability and mobility of chemicals in sediment, have been scarce."( A multisection passive sampler for measuring sediment porewater profile of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and its metabolites.
Bao, LJ; Feng, WH; Liu, HH; Wu, FC; Xu, SP; Zeng, EY, 2013
)
0.39
" The POP levels in biota were not significantly related to the POP levels in sediments, and the BSAF concept (Biota-Sediment Accumulation Factor) was found to be a poor predictor of the bioavailability and bioaccumulation of environmental pollutants in the present study."( Baseline levels and trophic transfer of persistent organic pollutants in sediments and biota from the Congo River Basin (DR Congo).
Abrantes, K; Bervoets, L; Blust, R; Bouillon, S; Covaci, A; Musibono, D; Verhaert, V; Verheyen, E, 2013
)
0.39
"Improved approaches are needed to assess bioavailability of hydrophobic organic compounds in contaminated soils."( Utilizing thin-film solid-phase extraction to assess the effect of organic carbon amendments on the bioavailability of DDT and dieldrin to earthworms.
Anderson, MO; Andrade, NA; Beyer, WN; Cantrell, KB; Centofanti, T; Chaney, RL; Hapeman, CJ; McConnell, LL; Nguyen, A; Novak, JM; Torrents, A, 2014
)
0.61
" The inhibition of DDX bioaccumulation by copper may be partially explained by the decrease in the bioavailability of sediment-associated DDXs which were estimated by biomimetic gut fluid extraction."( Joint toxicity of sediment-associated DDT and copper to a polychaete, Nereis succinea.
Qi, HX; Wang, F; You, J, 2015
)
0.69
"8% w/w granulated activated carbon (GAC) and two types of biochar (Burt's and BlueLeaf) on DDT bioavailability in soil (39 μg/g) were investigated using invertebrates (Eisenia fetida), plants (Cucurbita pepo spp."( Bioavailability assessments following biochar and activated carbon amendment in DDT-contaminated soil.
Denyes, MJ; Rutter, A; Zeeb, BA, 2016
)
0.88
" In this study, DDT and Hg contamination and bioavailability were assessed by using different approaches: (1) direct evaluation of sediment contamination, (2) assessment of bioaccumulation in native benthic invertebrates belonging to different taxonomic/functional groups, and (3) evaluation of the in situ bioavailability of DDT and Hg using passive samplers."( In situ bioavailability of DDT and Hg in sediments of the Toce River (Lake Maggiore basin, Northern Italy): accumulation in benthic invertebrates and passive samplers.
Guzzella, L; Marziali, L; Pisanello, F; Poma, G; Pozzoni, F; Roscioli, C; Rosignoli, F, 2016
)
1.08
" In vivo DDTr relative bioavailability (RBA) was measured using a mouse adipose model with values of 17."( Predicting the Relative Bioavailability of DDT and Its Metabolites in Historically Contaminated Soils Using a Tenax-Improved Physiologically Based Extraction Test (TI-PBET).
Cui, X; Juhasz, AL; Li, C; Ma, LQ; Sun, H, 2016
)
1.11
" The biodegradation of DDT into non-toxic, environmentally benign components is strongly limited by the poor bioavailability of DDT."( Atomic elucidation of the cyclodextrin effects on DDT solubility and biodegradation.
Gao, H; Jia, L; Ren, B; Zhang, M; Zheng, J, 2016
)
1
" In line with the biological results, the chemical data showed that the concentration of DDX in the pore water (in general a highly bioavailable phase) showed a minimal value (0."( Relevance of the bioavailable fraction of DDT and its metabolites in freshwater sediment toxicity: New insight into the mode of action of these chemicals on Dictyostelium discoideum.
Boeri, M; Borrelli, R; Governa, D; Oldani, A; Oliveri, L; Sforzini, S; Vago, F; Viarengo, A, 2016
)
0.7
"In this study, the bioavailability of DDTr (sum of DDT, DDD and DDE isomers) in pesticide-contaminated soil was assessed using an in vivo mouse model."( Oral relative bioavailability of Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in contaminated soil and its prediction using in vitro strategies for exposure refinement.
Herde, P; Juhasz, AL; Smith, E, 2016
)
0.94
" Measuring contaminant bioavailability in a before-and-after manner lends to improved assessment of remediation effectiveness."( Comparing different methods for assessing contaminant bioavailability during sediment remediation.
Gan, J; Jia, F; Liao, C; Taylor, A; Xue, J, 2016
)
0.43
" The results indicated that the addition of MWCNTs to sediment could reduce the content of HCHs and DDTs released from sediments, reducing bioavailability of HCHs and DDTs and minimizing risks to ecosystem and human."( Sequestration of HCHs and DDTs in sediments in Dongting Lake of China with multiwalled carbon nanotubes: implication for in situ sequestration.
Gong, J; Guo, Y; Lai, C; Su, C; Xu, P; Yang, C; Zeng, G, 2017
)
0.97
"7 pmol/g lw) but was below detection in serum samples, suggesting low or no bioavailability for DBDPE in cats."( Cats' Internal Exposure to Selected Brominated Flame Retardants and Organochlorines Correlated to House Dust and Cat Food.
Athanassiadis, I; Bergman, Å; Bignert, A; Jones, B; Norrgran Engdahl, J; Weiss, JM, 2017
)
0.46
" SB may effectively help to increase the bioavailability of organic pollutants and thereby enhance their microbial degradation in soil."( Biosurfactant-producing microorganism Pseudomonas sp. SB assists the phytoremediation of DDT-contaminated soil by two grass species.
Christie, P; Hou, J; Liu, W; Liu, X; Luo, Y; Teng, Y; Wang, B; Wang, Q, 2017
)
0.68
"Calculating risk from seafood exposure to persistent organic pollutants continues to be problematic as estimates of exposure from diet require extensive monitoring of fish species and limited assessments of bioavailability from sediments where the contaminants tend to reside."( Comparisons of field and laboratory estimates of risk of DDTs from contaminated sediments to humans that consume fish in Palos Verdes, California, USA.
Coffin, S; Gan, J; Schlenk, D, 2017
)
0.7
"Compared to the total chemical concentration, bioavailability is a better measurement of risks of hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOCs) to biota in contaminated soil or sediment."( Evaluation of different methods for assessing bioavailability of DDT residues during soil remediation.
Gan, J; Schlenk, D; Taylor, A; Wang, J; Xu, C, 2018
)
0.72
" In the present study, HPβCD's ability to promote DDT microbial degradation, enhance DDT phytoextraction by two native grasses (Schizachyrium scoparium and Panicum virgatum), and increase DDT bioavailability to redworms (Eisenia fetida) was investigated."( The fate of DDT in soils treated with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD).
Dahmer, CP; Rutter, A; Zeeb, BA, 2018
)
1.11
" However, no information on the species sensitivity distribution (SSD) of crops with regard to DDTs has been reported due to the lack of enough bioavailability data and models to normalize the bioavailability data from different sources."( Integrating bioavailability and soil aging in the derivation of DDT criteria for agricultural soils using crop species sensitivity distributions.
Han, X; Li, H; Ma, Y; Qiu, Y; Sun, Z; Yu, X, 2018
)
0.94
"The ATP-binding cassette transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is known to limit both brain penetration and oral bioavailability of many chemotherapy drugs."( A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
Ambudkar, SV; Brimacombe, KR; Chen, L; Gottesman, MM; Guha, R; Hall, MD; Klumpp-Thomas, C; Lee, OW; Lee, TD; Lusvarghi, S; Robey, RW; Shen, M; Tebase, BG, 2019
)
0.51
" Contaminant ingestion often occurs during food consumption; however, knowledge on the influence of food on DDT bioavailability remains limited."( The Influence of Food on the
Chen, Y; Cui, X; Juhasz, A; Li, C; Li, H; Ma, LQ, 2020
)
0.77
"8%) remained in FOREhST supernatant after Tenax collection, suggesting that prediction of bioavailability through bioaccessibility obtained by absorbent needs to be treated with caution when bioaccessibility is determined using a "fed state" in vitro method."( Assessment of DDT and its Metabolites Bioaccessibility in Historically Contaminated Soils Using Unfed and Fed in Vitro Methods.
Chen, XX; Guan, DX; He, H; Li, C; Xu, S, 2022
)
1.08

Dosage Studied

Sublethal dosage of DDT also prevents the establishment of a visual conditioned avoidance response. Female sparrows were dosed with 5 mg p,p'-DDT per kg body weight over 3 d.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"In 6-day pregnant New Zealand White rabbits dosed intravenously with 3H-nicotine, the 3H-activity in the uterine fluid was approximately 5 to 11 times greater than that in the plasma at the corresponding times; 3H-nicotine itself accounted for most of this radioactivity."( Accumulation of nicotine in the uterine fluid of the six-day pregnant rabbit.
Dames, NM; Fabro, S; McLachlan, JA; Sieber, SM, 1976
)
0.26
" Because of the relationship between dosage (quantity of application) and time of effectiveness of a compound, we are able to design a specific curve of time-efficacy of each insecticide at graded intervals (= increasing dilutions)."( [Studies of the time of effectiveness and the characterization of compounds in insecticide tests with Aedes aegypti].
Seidel, E, 1977
)
0.26
" The changes noted after 2 days of DDMU diet were confirmed by measurements on birds 18 h after oral dosing the DDMU."( The effects of 1,1-di(p-chlorophenyl)-2-chloroethylene on plasma enzymes and blood constituents in the Japanese quail.
Bunyan, PJ; Stanley, PI; Walker, CH; Westlake, GE, 1979
)
0.26
"The effects of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) or a combination of DDT (1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl) ethane), DDD (1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl) ethane) and DDE (1,1-dichloro-2,2,-bis (p-chlorophenyl ethylene) on organ weights, liver storage of vitamin A and carotene, selected blood chemistry parameters, and serum protein fractions were determined in penned white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) receiving a daily dosage of these compounds."( Physiological effects of polychlorinated biphenyls or a combination of DDT, DDD, and DDE in penned white pelicans.
Ammann, BM; Call, DJ; Greichus, YA, 1975
)
0.72
"Confidence intervals and hypothesis tests are developed for dose-response relations based on dichotomous data from animal carcinogenicity experiments."( Confidence intervals and test of hypotheses concerning dose response relations inferred from animal carcinogenicity data.
Crump, KS; Deal, KL; Guess, HA, 1977
)
0.26
" The test results showed that a 4% dosage of DDT is not enough to kill 55% of the insects."( [Susceptibility tests of the bedbug, Cimex lectularius L. (Hemiptera, Cimicidae) to DDT in Belo Horizonte, MG (Brazil)].
Nagem, RL; Williams, P, 1992
)
0.77
" The chemicals distributed in adipose tissue, blood, and skin lipids were determined six times after the last dosing at intervals of 4 to 9 weeks."( Disposition of beta-hexachlorocyclohexane, p,p'-DDT, and trans-chlordane administered subcutaneously to monkeys (Macaca fascicularis).
Kawasaki, Y; Ochiai, T; Sasaki, K; Sekita, K; Takeda, M; Uchiyama, M, 1992
)
0.54
"Our objective was to compare two methods of oral dosing of p,p'-DDT (1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl) ethane) on uptake of DDT metabolites and isomers (i."( A comparison between intubation and food addition as routes of oral exposure for northern bobwhites to DDT insecticide.
Scanlon, PF; Sullivan, JP, 1991
)
0.73
" Since there was no change in the levels of serum glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and serum glutamate pyruvate transaminase, it can be concluded that DDT does not significantly affect liver function at the dosage used."( Effect of subacute DDT on pharmacokinetics of isoniazid and liver function in rabbits.
Agarwal, AK; Chugh, Y; Sankaranarayanan, A; Sharma, PL, 1990
)
0.81
"Adrenal ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is greatly elevated in rats dosed once with one of several insecticides; chlordecone, p,p'DDT or permethrin."( Modulation of adrenal ornithine decarboxylase by chlordecone, p,p'DDT and permethrin.
Bondy, SC; Hong, JS, 1987
)
0.72
"75 microM in 5 microliters NaCl) decreased the peak tremor power due to subsequently administered DDT, while increasing the tremor response in rats later dosed with chlordecone."( Pharmacological modification of tremor and enhanced acoustic startle by chlordecone and p,p'-DDT.
Gallus, JA; Herr, DW; Tilson, HA, 1987
)
0.71
" However, when administered at the time of mating or early after fertilization, the same dosage caused loss of pre-implantation embryos."( Multiple estrogenic action of O,P'-DDT: initiation and maintenance of pregnancy in the rat.
Dey, SK; Johnson, DC; Kogo, H; Sen, M, 1988
)
0.55
"This paper introduces a dose-response model for toxic quantal response data based on hit theory applied to the dose unit as transformed by a nonlinear kinetic equation."( A dose-response model incorporating nonlinear kinetics.
Rai, K; Van Ryzin, J, 1987
)
0.27
" Dose-response curves demonstrated a close relationship between the inhibitory effects of DXS on the DTH and the A-PE/DDA complex formation."( Suppression of the cellular adjuvanticity of lipophilic amines by a polyanion.
Hilgers, LA; Jansze, M; Snippe, H; van Vliet, KE; Willers, JM, 1986
)
0.27
" The results were considered to be favourable for the use of deltamethrin in malaria control by means of residual house-spraying with the non-irritant dosage of 15 mg/m2, but require evaluation in larger trials."( A field trial of microencapsulated deltamethrin, a synthetic pyrethroid, for malaria control.
Crees, MJ; Govere, J; Taylor, P, 1986
)
0.27
" The dose-response curves of these chemicals were similar to those of other known tumor promoters on Chinese hamster V79 cells."( Inhibition of gap junctional intercellular communication in human teratocarcinoma cells by organochlorine pesticides.
Chang, CC; Kavanagh, T; Lin, ZX; Trosko, JE, 1986
)
0.27
" Based on dosage mortality curves obtained with increasing amounts of atrazine, mortalities of 50 percent of the insect populations would have been achieved with 23, 40, 6, and 10 micrograms of atrazine added to the abovementioned dosages of carbofuran, DDT, parathion, and diazinon, respectively."( Synergism of insecticides by herbicides.
Anderegg, BN; Liang, TT; Lichtenstein, EP, 1973
)
0.43
"In the residual spraying of insecticides, application of the correct dosage is important both to obtain the optimum effectiveness and to avoid wasting insecticide."( Replacement of spray nozzle tips based on operational considerations.
Kolta, S; Kuo, C; Rafatjah, H, 1972
)
0.25
"The oral administration of aldrin to male and female beagles, whose diet already included a fixed, regular oral dosage of DDT, resulted in a dramatic rise in the concentrations of DDT, DDE, and DDD in blood and fat."( DDT tissue retention: sudden rise induced by the addition of aldrin to a fixed DDT intake.
Cubit, DA; Deichmann, WB; MacDonald, WE, 1971
)
1.9
" Sublethal dosage of DDT also prevents the establishment of a visual conditioned avoidance response."( DDT: sublethal effects on brook trout nervous system.
Anderson, JM; Peterson, MR, 1969
)
2.01
"Residues of 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane (DDT) and 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane (DDD) in brains of cowbirds (Molothrus ater) killed by dietary dosage of DDT were similar in birds that died after various lengths of time on dosage and in birds that died of delayed effects after as much as 40 days on clean food."( Residues of DDT in brains and bodies of birds that died on dosage and in survivors.
Christensen, R; Stickel, LF; Stickel, WH, 1966
)
0.87
" These results indicate that a single dosage of DDT administered to a chick embryo prior to incubation does not affect early stages of gonadal development but that effects on both ovaries and testes occur 12 days following exposure."( Effects of 1,1-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-2,2,2-trichloroethane (DDT) on gonadal development in the chick embryo: a histological and histochemical study.
Swartz, WJ, 1984
)
0.77
"Seven days after dosing of two rhesus monkeys with 14C-DDT (50 mg/kg) per os, one monkey was put on a diet containing 5% mineral oil for 35 days, whereas the other animal served as control."( Mineral oil in the diet enhances fecal excretion of DDT in the rhesus monkey.
Ballhorn, L; Rozman, K; Rozman, T, 1983
)
0.76
" Intrauterine growth retardation, without an increase in gross abnormalities, was also observed in the offspring of pregnant New Zealand White rabbits dosed during the preimplantation stages of pregnancy with an "environmental cocktail" composed of ethanol, nicotine, caffeine, sodium salicylate, and dichloro-diphenyl-trichloro-ethane (DDT)."( Chemical exposure of embryos during the preimplantation stages of pregnancy: mortality rate and intrauterine development.
Dames, NM; Fabro, S; McLachlan, JA, 1984
)
0.44
" Many of the studies that are available were done during the early period of immunotoxicology and many reports do not state whether or not any other toxic signs were observed and the dose-response relationships were not generally examined."( The immunotoxicity of pesticides in rodents.
Rodgers, K, 1995
)
0.29
" Multiplicities decreased in the order Ar-1254 > PB > DDT, indicating that Ar-1254 was more potent than either PB or DDT at the dosage levels used."( Dissimilar frequency of hepatoblastomas and hepatic cystadenomas and adenocarcinomas arising in hepatocellular neoplasms of D2B6F1 mice initiated with N-nitrosodiethylamine and subsequently given Aroclor-1254, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, or phenobarb
Diwan, BA; Kurata, Y; Rice, JM; Ward, JM,
)
0.38
" In the dose-response study, three dose levels of DDT (5, 25 and 50 mg/kg/day) were administered orally to rats once a day for 2 weeks."( Effect of DDT on hepatic gap junctional intercellular communication in rats.
Ito, S; Oyamada, M; Tanaka, M; Tateno, C; Yoshitake, A, 1994
)
0.94
" To study the role of serotonin (5-HT) receptors in myoclonus induced by p,p'-DDT in the rat, we performed time-course and dose-response studies of the effects of p,p'-DDT on behavior and regional 5-HT1 and 5-HT2 binding sites."( p,p'-DDT myoclonic/epileptic model: serotonin receptor binding and behavioral studies in the rat.
Gonzales, W; Pluchino, R; Pranzatelli, MR; Simmens, S; Tailor, PT, 1994
)
1.03
" It is concluded that even though mud plastering reduces the effectiveness of the residual spraying to a certain extent, timely spray and better coverage with correct dosage can still effectively reduce the malaria incidence."( A note on the impact of mud plastering on the efficacy of DDT residual spraying in tribal villages of Koraput District, Orissa State.
Gunasekaran, K; Sadanandane, C; Sahu, SS, 1993
)
0.53
" All compounds were tested at the recommended diagnostic dosage and exposure time."( Insecticide susceptibility status of Anopheles koliensis (Diptera: Culicidae) in northeastern Irian Jaya, Indonesia.
Annis, BA; Arbani, PR; Bahang, ZH; Bangs, MJ; Hamzah, N, 1993
)
0.29
" Trout were dosed by a single ip injection of TCDD in a corn oil vehicle."( Effect of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) on the epidermal growth factor receptor in hepatic plasma membranes of rainbow trout.
Giesy, JP; Newsted, JL, 1993
)
0.29
" Trout were dosed by a single ip injection of TCDD in a corn oil vehicle."( Effect of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) on the epidermal growth factor receptor in hepatic plasma membranes of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).
Giesy, JP; Newsted, JL, 1993
)
0.29
" Two acute dose-response studies were conducted, the only difference being the doses used (pre-established percentages of the TD) and dosing volume (1 and 5 ml/kg); a third study was conducted using a single dose and varying the dosing volume (1 and 5 ml/kg)."( The influence of dosing volume on the toxicity of p,p'-DDT.
McDaniel, KL; Moser, VC, 1997
)
0.54
" This suggests that the level of resistance conferred by this mechanism in its heterozygous state is below the level of detection by the WHO carbamate discriminating dosage bioassay."( Resistance management strategies in malaria vector mosquito control. Baseline data for a large-scale field trial against Anopheles albimanus in Mexico.
Arredondo-Jiménez, JI; Hemingway, J; Penilla, RP; Rodríguez, AD; Rodríguez, MH; Torres, JL, 1998
)
0.3
"The aim of this study was to perform a dose-response test to determine whether bovine oocytes exposed to dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), hexachlorocyclohexane (gammaHCH), or methoxychlor (MXC) in vitro would exhibit changes in maturation rates, cleavage rates at Day 2, or blastocyst rates at Day 7 to 8 after fertilization in vitro (IVF)."( Influence of organochlorine pesticides on maturation and postfertilization development of bovine oocytes in vitro.
Alm, H; Kanitz, W; Tiemann, U; Torner, H,
)
0.33
" Assessments of combination effects are frequently complicated by a lack of information on dose-response relationships."( Synergisms with mixtures of xenoestrogens: a reevaluation using the method of isoboles.
Altenburger, R; Kortenkamp, A, 1998
)
0.3
" However, there was no evidence for a dose-response relationship, and the association was limited to women whose blood was collected close to the time of diagnosis."( Serum organochlorine pesticides and PCBs and breast cancer risk: results from a prospective analysis (USA).
Brock, JW; Dorgan, JF; Miller, R; Needham, LL; Rothman, N; Schussler, N; Stephenson, HE; Taylor, PR, 1999
)
0.3
"A high serum concentration of p,p'-DDT over the course of the two examinations was associated with a more than three-fold significantly increased risk of breast cancer, and a dose-response relationship was apparent."( Repeated measurements of organochlorine exposure and breast cancer risk (Denmark).
Grandjean, P; Hartvig, HB; Høyer, AP; Jørgensen, T, 2000
)
0.58
" were exposed to sediments dosed with dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), and the toxicity and toxicokinetics were determined."( Toxicity and bioaccumulation of DDT in freshwater amphipods in exposures to spiked sediments.
Gedeon, ML; Landrum, PF; Lotufo, GR, 2001
)
0.83
" In most cases, however, the dose-response relationships were complex (non-monotonic), with effects at the highest dose examined being opposite to effects seen at lower doses."( Effects of prenatal exposure to low doses of diethylstilbestrol, o,p'DDT, and methoxychlor on postnatal growth and neurobehavioral development in male and female mice.
Palanza, P; Parmigiani, S; vom Saal, FS, 2001
)
0.55
" When the order of administration of pesticides and antigens was reversed, no differences in immune function between the control and dosed groups were apparent, indicating that frogs exposed to pathogens prior to pesticide exposure can still respond."( Immunosuppression in the northern leopard frog (Rana pipiens) induced by pesticide exposure.
Albert, A; Dixon, B; Drouillard, KG; Gilbertson, MK; Haffner, GD, 2003
)
0.32
" A successful antiplague operation, however, depends on the methods used, the dosage of pulicide, and the time and intensity of its application."( Application of DDT, BHC, and cyanogas in the control of plague in India.
SEAL, SC; WAGLE, PM, 1953
)
0.59
"Widespread insecticidal work, using a dosage of 200 mg of DDT per square foot (2."( Malaria control in South Malabar, Madras State.
MARA, L, 1954
)
0.48
"6% by weight pyrethrum extract (25% pyrethrins) and 3% DDT at a dosage of 10 g per 1000 cubic feet (35 g/100 m(3)) gave satisfactory control of non-resistant mosquitos and created no passenger reaction."( Studies on aircraft disinsection at "blocks away".
KEIDING, J; SULLIVAN, WN; WRIGHT, JW, 1962
)
0.49
"Information about the endocrine effects of different levels of DDT/DDE in human subjects is scarce; dosage may be a determinant factor of the type of effect."( [DDT/DDE concentrations and risk of hypospadias. Pilot case-control study].
Cuevas-Alpuche, J; Dewailly, E; Farías, P; Flores-Luévano, S; Hernández, M; Romano-Riquer, P; Romieu, I; Weber, JP,
)
1.28
" Female sparrows were dosed daily with either 5 mg p,p'-DDT per kg body mass or corn oil vehicle over 3 days."( The effect of flight, fasting and p,p'-DDT on thyroid hormones and corticosterone in Gambel's white-crowned sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelli.
Carr, JA; Cobb, GP; Scollon, EJ, 2004
)
0.84
"Assessing for interactions among chemicals in a mixture involves the comparison of actual mixture responses to those predicted under the assumption of zero interaction (additivity), based on individual chemical dose-response data."( A novel flexible approach for evaluating fixed ratio mixtures of full and partial agonists.
Carchman, RA; Carney, EW; Carter, WH; Charles, GD; Gennings, C; Gollapudi, BB, 2004
)
0.32
" However, no consistent dose-response effect was apparent across low, medium, and high exposure categories."( Age at natural menopause and exposure to organochlorine pesticides in Hispanic women.
Akkina, J; Bachand, A; Keefe, T; Reif, J, 2004
)
0.32
" Over a 42-d period, seabass were fed pellets dosed with p,p'-DDT at environmentally realistic levels."( Bioaccumulation of DDT pesticide in cultured Asian seabass following dietary exposure.
Barlow, PJ; Bayen, S; Giusti, P; Lee, HK; Obard, JP, 2005
)
0.9
" To provide data useful for the risk assessment of postnatal exposure to POPs, mixtures containing 19 PCBs, DDT, and DDE were prepared according to their concentrations previously measured in the milk of Canadian women, and dose-response effects were tested on the proliferation of MCF7-E3 cells in vitro, and in vivo experiments."( Effects of postnatal exposure to a mixture of polychlorinated biphenyls, p,p'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, and p-p'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethene in prepubertal and adult female Sprague-Dawley rats.
Cole, J; Cooke, GM; Desaulniers, D; Leingartner, K; Soumano, K; Wade, M; Yagminas, A; Yang, J,
)
0.34
" Mortality rates in the kdr strain exposed to chlorfenapyr treated netting in tunnel tests were much higher than with permethrin treated netting over the same 100-500 mg/m(2) dosage range."( Chlorfenapyr: a pyrrole insecticide for the control of pyrethroid or DDT resistant Anopheles gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae) mosquitoes.
Akogbéto, M; Boko, P; N'Guessan, R; Odjo, A; Rowland, M; Yates, A, 2007
)
0.57
" For dose-response studies, a single dose of 3, 10, 30, 100, or 300 mg/kg body weight o,p'-DTT was administered for 3 consecutive days."( o,p'-DDT elicits PXR/CAR-, not ER-, mediated responses in the immature ovariectomized rat liver.
Burgoon, LD; Chittim, B; Kiyosawa, N; Kwekel, JC; Tashiro, C; Williams, KJ; Zacharewski, TR, 2008
)
0.86
" The onset of seizures resulting in death was observed in the avian model Northern bobwhite after oral dosing with RDX beginning at 8 mg/kg/day in subacute (14 days) exposures, whereas affective doses of the TNT derivative, 2,6-dinitrotoluene (2,6-DNT), caused gastrointestinal impacts, lethargy, and emaciation in subacute and subchronic (60 days) exposures."( Neurotoxicogenomic investigations to assess mechanisms of action of the munitions constituents RDX and 2,6-DNT in Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus).
Clarke, J; Deng, Y; Escalon, L; Gong, P; Guan, X; Gust, KA; Indest, KJ; Johnson, MS; Perkins, EJ; Pirooznia, M; Quinn, MJ, 2009
)
0.35
" Dose-response bioassays were conducted on area-wide collection of bollworm populations from major host plants, while biochemical techniques were used to evaluate basic mechanisms underlying resistance."( Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
Achaleke, J; Brévault, T; Ghogomu, RT; Martin, T; Vaissayre, M, 2009
)
0.35
" In addition, in this multivariate model, a non-linear dose-response curve was observed between Total DDT body burden (sum of the three DDT-derivatives measured: p,p'-DDT, p,p'-DDE, and p,p'-DDD) and IGF-I in pre-pubertal male children (6-15years; p=0."( Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) serum concentrations in healthy children and adolescents: relationship to level of contamination by DDT-derivative pesticides.
Alvarez-León, EE; Apolinario, R; Boada, LD; Lara, PC; Losada, A; Luzardo, OP; Serra-Majem, L; Zumbado, M, 2010
)
0.78
" A diagnostic dosage (DD) was established for each insecticide using the CAREC reference susceptible Ae."( Characterisation of DDT and pyrethroid resistance in Trinidad and Tobago populations of Aedes aegypti.
Brogdon, WG; Chadee, DD; Polson, KA; Rawlins, SC, 2011
)
0.69
"All DDT metabolites tested revealed a clear dose-response relationship for cytotoxicity in RTG-2 cells, but no dioxin-like activities with RTL-W1 cells."( Toxicity, dioxin-like activities, and endocrine effects of DDT metabolites--DDA, DDMU, DDMS, and DDCN.
Braunbeck, T; Erdinger, L; Hallare, AV; Hollert, H; Otte, JC; Rastall, A; Ricking, M; Schwarzbauer, J; Wetterauer, B, 2012
)
1.18
" Application of the model was restricted by the current lack of quantitative dose-response relationships between non-toxic stress and survival and reproduction."( Modelling the impact of toxic and disturbance stress on white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) populations.
Foppen, RP; Hendriks, AJ; Korsman, JC; Lenders, HJ; Schipper, AM, 2012
)
0.38
" These formulations were then spray painted on neat and manure coated mud plaques, representative of the material typically used in rural mud houses, at twice the upper limit of the WHO recommended dosage range."( Degradation of insecticides used for indoor spraying in malaria control and possible solutions.
Brindley, GW; Coetzee, M; Crowther, NA; Focke, WW; Labuschagne, FJ; Maity, A; Massinga, P; Moyo, L; Muiambo, H; Nhlapo, NS; Sibanda, MM, 2011
)
0.37
" A significant log dose-response relationship was found between log fiber concentration and organism mortality."( Use of solid phase microextraction to estimate toxicity: relating fiber concentrations to toxicity--part I.
Ding, Y; Harwood, AD; Landrum, PF; Lydy, MJ; You, J, 2012
)
0.38
" Such information will facilitate identifying the optimum active ingredient (AI) dosage and intervention coverage important for the development of spatial repellent tools--one of several novel strategies being evaluated for vector-borne disease control."( Identifying the effective concentration for spatial repellency of the dengue vector Aedes aegypti.
Achee, N; Chareonviryiphap, T; Grieco, J; Hendarto, J; Martin, N; Masuoka, P; Polsomboon, S; Smith, P, 2012
)
0.38
" Ultimately, careful control of dosing conditions (formulation, prandial state), and thus the extent of lymphatic transport, may be important in assuring reproducible efficacy and toxicity for lymphatically transported drugs."( The impact of lymphatic transport on the systemic disposition of lipophilic drugs.
Bulitta, JB; Caliph, SM; Cao, E; Han, S; Hu, L; Porter, CJ; Trevaskis, NL, 2013
)
0.39
"Mosquitoes were collected during September 2010 - February 2012 from 60 randomly selected villages in the 10 districts and blood-fed females were exposed to the diagnostic dosage of DDT (4."( Response of malaria vectors to conventional insecticides in the southern districts of Odisha State, India.
Gunasekaran, K; Jambulingam, P; Pradhan, MM; Raju, HK; Sahu, SS; Vanamail, P, 2014
)
0.59
" Dose-response relations appear to be non-monotonic."( Obesogenic effects of endocrine disruptors, what do we know from animal and human studies?
de Cock, M; van de Bor, M, 2014
)
0.4
" Lastly, the authors illustrate practical applications of this model such as improving passive sampler design and understanding the kinetics of passive dosing experiments."( Modeling the transport of organic chemicals between polyethylene passive samplers and water in finite and infinite bath conditions.
Apell, JN; Gschwend, PM; Tcaciuc, AP, 2015
)
0.42
" By making laboratory-based analysis of DDT dosing accessible to field operatives, routine monitoring of DDT levels can be promoted in low- and middle- income countries to maximise the effectiveness of IRS."( Development of a Simple Dipstick Assay for Operational Monitoring of DDT.
Coleman, M; Das, P; Deb, R; Foster, GM; Ghosh, A; Hemingway, J; Ismail, HM; Kumar, V; Paine, MJ; Shivam, P; Singh, RP; Williams, C, 2016
)
0.94
" The blood-fed wild caught females were exposed to the diagnostic dosage of DDT (4."( Triple insecticide resistance in Anopheles culicifacies: A practical impediment for malaria control in Odisha State, India.
Gunasekaran, K; Jambulingam, P; Sahu, SS; Vijayakumar, T, 2015
)
0.65
" After dosing for 104 days, histological assessments and reproductive-endpoints were assessed."( Effects of environmental endocrine disruptors, including insecticides used for malaria vector control on reproductive parameters of male rats.
Bornman, MS; de Jager, C; Joubert, AM; Naidoo, V; Patrick, SM; Pitts, N, 2016
)
0.43
"Following World Health Organization guidelines, dose-response curves for a range of insecticides were established for both colonized and field caught Ae."( Insecticide susceptibility of Aedes albopictus and Ae. aegypti from Brazil and the Swiss-Italian border region.
Araújo, AP; Ayres, CFJ; Barbosa, RMR; Crespo, MM; de Melo-Santos, MAV; de Oliveira, CMF; de Oliveira, MF; de Oliveira, TSA; Engeler, L; Flacio, E; Müller, P; Regis, LN; Silva-Filha, MHNL; Suter, T, 2017
)
0.46
" Further, when the human condition was simulated in animals, there was deprivation in body weight and glucose levels in starved litchi seed dosed rats, causing hypoglycemia."( Methylenecyclopropyl glycine, not pesticide exposure as the primary etiological factor underlying hypoglycemic encephalopathy in Muzaffarpur, India.
Asthana, S; Das, M; Dixit, S; Kumar, A; Singh, SP; Srivastava, A; Tripathi, A, 2019
)
0.51
": Insecticide applied at optimum dosage and coverage delays the development of resistance in disease vectors."( A laboratory simulation study on suppression of resistance genes by differential exposures to an insecticide in
Agrawal, OP; Raghavendra, K; Velamuri, PS; Verma, V,
)
0.13
": Variable simulated exposures resulted in precipitation of increased resistance while complete exposure resulted in lower levels of resistance, signifying the importance of optimum dosage and coverage in the indoor residual spray in delaying/avoiding the development of insecticide resistance in the disease vectors."( A laboratory simulation study on suppression of resistance genes by differential exposures to an insecticide in
Agrawal, OP; Raghavendra, K; Velamuri, PS; Verma, V,
)
0.13
" After adjusting for potential confounding factors such as age, sex and body mass index, all six OCPs showed positive associations with type 2 diabetes in a linear dose-response manner."( Exposure to organochlorine pesticides and the risk of type 2 diabetes in the population of East China.
Han, X; Jiang, G; Li, A; Li, Y; Meng, L; Turyk, ME; Wang, P; Xu, Y; Yang, R; Zhang, F; Zhang, J; Zhang, Q, 2020
)
0.56
" The BART method found dose-response functions similar to the BKMR model."( Prenatal exposure to a mixture of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and child reading skills at school age.
Braun, JM; Calafat, AM; Chen, A; Dietrich, KN; Jandarov, R; Lanphear, BP; McCandless, L; Sjödin, A; Vuong, AM; Xie, C; Yolton, K; Zhang, H, 2020
)
0.56
" Dose-response meta-analysis suggested a non-linear relation between p,p'-DDE and T2D."( Exposure to the pesticide DDT and risk of diabetes and hypertension: Systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies.
Baltazar-Reyes, MC; Cupul-Uicab, LA; Hernández-Mariano, JÁ; Salazar-Martínez, E, 2022
)
1.02
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Roles (4)

RoleDescription
bridged diphenyl acaricidenull
carcinogenic agentA role played by a chemical compound which is known to induce a process of carcinogenesis by corrupting normal cellular pathways, leading to the acquistion of tumoral capabilities.
persistent organic pollutantAny environmental contaminant that is resistant to environmental degradation through photolytic, biological or chemical processes. Such substances can have significant impact on health and the environment, as they persist in the environment, bioaccumulate in animal tissue and so biomagnify in food chains.
endocrine disruptorAny compound that can disrupt the functions of the endocrine (hormone) system
[role information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Drug Classes (4)

ClassDescription
chlorophenylethaneAny chlorohydrocarbon that is phenylethane substituted by at least one chloro group at unspecified position.
organochlorine insecticideAny organochlorine pesticide that has been used as an insecticide.
benzenoid aromatic compound
monochlorobenzenesAny member of the class of chlorobenzenes containing a mono- or poly-substituted benzene ring in which only one substituent is chlorine.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Protein Targets (59)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain A, TYROSYL-DNA PHOSPHODIESTERASEHomo sapiens (human)Potency44.66840.004023.8416100.0000AID485290
Chain A, CruzipainTrypanosoma cruziPotency31.62280.002014.677939.8107AID1476
interleukin 8Homo sapiens (human)Potency66.82420.047349.480674.9780AID651758
pregnane X receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency44.96470.025127.9203501.1870AID651751
hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha subunitHomo sapiens (human)Potency39.28813.189029.884159.4836AID1224846; AID1224894
RAR-related orphan receptor gammaMus musculus (house mouse)Potency45.31810.006038.004119,952.5996AID1159521; AID1159523
SMAD family member 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency54.94100.173734.304761.8120AID1346859
SMAD family member 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency54.94100.173734.304761.8120AID1346859
TDP1 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.10930.000811.382244.6684AID686978
GLI family zinc finger 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency21.43130.000714.592883.7951AID1259369; AID1259392
AR proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency27.46520.000221.22318,912.5098AID1259243; AID1259247; AID743035; AID743036; AID743053; AID743063
hypoxia-inducible factor 1, alpha subunit (basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor)Homo sapiens (human)Potency79.43280.00137.762544.6684AID2120
thyroid stimulating hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.02000.001318.074339.8107AID926; AID938
estrogen receptor 2 (ER beta)Homo sapiens (human)Potency48.94540.000657.913322,387.1992AID1259377; AID1259378
nuclear receptor subfamily 1, group I, member 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency12.96040.001022.650876.6163AID1224838; AID1224839; AID1224893
progesterone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency42.47650.000417.946075.1148AID1346784; AID1346795
cytochrome P450 family 3 subfamily A polypeptide 4Homo sapiens (human)Potency20.94220.01237.983543.2770AID1346984; AID1645841
glucocorticoid receptor [Homo sapiens]Homo sapiens (human)Potency42.60820.000214.376460.0339AID588533; AID720691; AID720692; AID720719
retinoic acid nuclear receptor alpha variant 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency65.46830.003041.611522,387.1992AID1159552; AID1159553; AID1159555
retinoid X nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency32.74170.000817.505159.3239AID1159527; AID1159531; AID588544; AID588546
estrogen-related nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency47.48650.001530.607315,848.9004AID1224841; AID1224842; AID1224848; AID1224849; AID1259401; AID1259403
farnesoid X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency33.76100.375827.485161.6524AID588526; AID588527; AID743217; AID743239
pregnane X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency27.19390.005428.02631,258.9301AID1346982; AID720659
estrogen nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency34.56650.000229.305416,493.5996AID1259244; AID1259383; AID588513; AID588514; AID743069; AID743075; AID743077; AID743078; AID743079
GVesicular stomatitis virusPotency2.18760.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor deltaHomo sapiens (human)Potency41.77000.001024.504861.6448AID588534; AID588535; AID743227
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency56.01570.001019.414170.9645AID743094; AID743140
vitamin D (1,25- dihydroxyvitamin D3) receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency39.81070.023723.228263.5986AID588543
euchromatic histone-lysine N-methyltransferase 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency28.18380.035520.977089.1251AID504332
aryl hydrocarbon receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency69.07820.000723.06741,258.9301AID743085
thyroid stimulating hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency28.55620.001628.015177.1139AID1224843; AID1224895; AID1259385; AID1259395
activating transcription factor 6Homo sapiens (human)Potency50.83660.143427.612159.8106AID1159516; AID1159519
nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells 1 (p105), isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency50.226419.739145.978464.9432AID1159509; AID1159518
v-jun sarcoma virus 17 oncogene homolog (avian)Homo sapiens (human)Potency34.49980.057821.109761.2679AID1159526; AID1159528
Histone H2A.xCricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster)Potency58.10820.039147.5451146.8240AID1224845; AID1224896
Caspase-7Cricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster)Potency69.07820.006723.496068.5896AID1346980
cellular tumor antigen p53 isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency31.62280.316212.443531.6228AID902
15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase [NAD(+)] isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency25.11890.001815.663839.8107AID894
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.08910.010039.53711,122.0200AID588545
potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily H member 2 isoform dHomo sapiens (human)Potency20.81140.01789.637444.6684AID588834
caspase-3Cricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster)Potency69.07820.006723.496068.5896AID1346980
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency23.97450.000323.4451159.6830AID743065; AID743066; AID743067
heat shock protein beta-1Homo sapiens (human)Potency57.23150.042027.378961.6448AID743210; AID743228
mitogen-activated protein kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency25.11890.039816.784239.8107AID995
nuclear factor NF-kappa-B p105 subunit isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency44.66844.466824.832944.6684AID651749
nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency38.76300.000627.21521,122.0200AID651741; AID743202; AID743219
gemininHomo sapiens (human)Potency18.83750.004611.374133.4983AID624296
peripheral myelin protein 22Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency10.18150.005612.367736.1254AID624032
lethal factor (plasmid)Bacillus anthracis str. A2012Potency6.30960.020010.786931.6228AID912
lamin isoform A-delta10Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.50120.891312.067628.1838AID1487
Voltage-dependent calcium channel gamma-2 subunitMus musculus (house mouse)Potency69.07820.001557.789015,848.9004AID1259244
Interferon betaHomo sapiens (human)Potency2.18760.00339.158239.8107AID1645842
HLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)Potency2.18760.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
Cellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)Potency51.64070.002319.595674.0614AID651631; AID651743; AID720552
Glutamate receptor 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency69.07820.001551.739315,848.9004AID1259244
Nuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency74.97800.026622.448266.8242AID651802
Inositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency2.18760.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
cytochrome P450 2C9, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency2.18760.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Androgen receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)18.19700.00101.979414.1600AID255211
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (178)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of autophagyInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-serine phosphorylation of STAT proteinInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to interferon-betaInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell proliferationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of viral genome replicationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of MHC class I biosynthetic processInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
defense response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
neuron cellular homeostasisInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of Lewy body formationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T-helper 2 cell cytokine productionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
T cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
humoral immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class I via ER pathway, TAP-independentHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of T cell anergyHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
defense responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
detection of bacteriumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-12 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-6 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protection from natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of dendritic cell differentiationHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class IbHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycle G2/M phase transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ER overload responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
in utero embryonic developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
somitogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic progenitor cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell proliferation involved in immune responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
B cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to ischemiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleotide-excision repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
double-strand break repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein import into nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
autophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in cell cycle arrestCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in transcription of p21 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
Ras protein signal transductionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
gastrulationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein localizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA replicationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
determination of adult lifespanCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
rRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to salt stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to inorganic substanceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to X-rayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of gene expressionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
viral processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cerebellum developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitotic G1 DNA damage checkpoint signalingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of telomere maintenance via telomeraseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell differentiation in thymusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
tumor necrosis factor-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of tissue remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UVCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
multicellular organism growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeabilityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
entrainment of circadian clock by photoperiodCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial DNA repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription initiation-coupled chromatin remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of proteolysisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of RNA polymerase II transcription preinitiation complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to antibioticCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
circadian behaviorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
bone marrow developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
embryonic organ developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein stabilizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of helicase activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein tetramerizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromosome organizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic stem cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
type II interferon-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac septum morphogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of programmed necrotic cell deathCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to endoplasmic reticulum stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
necroptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to xenobiotic stimulusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to ionizing radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UV-CCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to actinomycin DCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replicative senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oxidative stress-induced premature senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oligodendrocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of execution phase of apoptosisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeability involved in apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of G1 to G0 transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of miRNA processingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of pentose-phosphate shuntCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of fibroblast apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of glucose metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of steroid metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular receptor signaling pathwayNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
circadian regulation of gene expressionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to sterolNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of circadian rhythmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of fat cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
adipose tissue developmentNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
T-helper 17 cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate metabolic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (54)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cytokine activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
peptide antigen bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
transcription cis-regulatory region bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
core promoter sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
TFIID-class transcription factor complex bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription activator activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protease bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
p53 bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA 3'-UTR bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
copper ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
receptor tyrosine kinase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ubiquitin protein ligase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase regulator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ATP-dependent DNA/DNA annealing activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein phosphatase 2A bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II-specific DNA-binding transcription factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
14-3-3 protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
MDM2/MDM4 family protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
disordered domain specific bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
general transcription initiation factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
molecular function activator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
promoter-specific chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
oxysterol bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
ligand-activated transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
sequence-specific double-stranded DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear receptor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
inositol-1,3,4,5,6-pentakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol heptakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 1-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 3-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol 5-diphosphate pentakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol diphosphate tetrakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (36)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
extracellular spaceInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
ER to Golgi transport vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
secretory granule membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
phagocytic vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
early endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
recycling endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
lumenal side of endoplasmic reticulum membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
MHC class I protein complexHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replication forkCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleolusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
centrosomeCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
PML bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription repressor complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
site of double-strand breakCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
germ cell nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatinCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription regulator complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneGlutamate receptor 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear bodyNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
chromatinNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
fibrillar centerInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (80)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID504749qHTS profiling for inhibitors of Plasmodium falciparum proliferation2011Science (New York, N.Y.), Aug-05, Volume: 333, Issue:6043
Chemical genomic profiling for antimalarial therapies, response signatures, and molecular targets.
AID1104144Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Ngong to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104169Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-resistance Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain GS-RR06 assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104155Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-resistance Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain GS-RR06 to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104142Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Gaschiga isolated from tomato plant to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104163Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Pitoa isolated from tomato plant assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1434540Larvicidal activity against Anopheles arabiensis KGB measured after 24 hrs2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 02-01, Volume: 27, Issue:3
New antiprotozoal agents: Synthesis and biological evaluation of different 4-(7-chloroquinolin-4-yl) piperazin-1-yl)pyrrolidin-2-yl)methanone derivatives.
AID1111163Insecticidal activity against Aphis gossypii clone Burk (cotton aphid) in cotton plant leaf assessed as mortality after 24 hr by leaf disk assay2010Pest management science, Mar, Volume: 66, Issue:3
Insecticide resistance traits differ among and within host races in Aphis gossypii.
AID1111164Insecticidal activity against Aphis gossypii clone Auber (cotton aphid) in egg plant leaf assessed as mortality after 24 hr by leaf disk assay2010Pest management science, Mar, Volume: 66, Issue:3
Insecticide resistance traits differ among and within host races in Aphis gossypii.
AID1102184Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) leaves after 1 to 15 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID977599Inhibition of sodium fluorescein uptake in OATP1B1-transfected CHO cells at an equimolar substrate-inhibitor concentration of 10 uM2013Molecular pharmacology, Jun, Volume: 83, Issue:6
Structure-based identification of OATP1B1/3 inhibitors.
AID1104156Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Gaschiga isolated from tomato plant assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID588213Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in non-rodents2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID255211Inhibitory concentration against recombinant rat androgen receptor expressed in Escherichia coli using [3H]methyltrienolone (R 1881)2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-08, Volume: 48, Issue:18
Impact of induced fit on ligand binding to the androgen receptor: a multidimensional QSAR study to predict endocrine-disrupting effects of environmental chemicals.
AID1434539Larvicidal activity against Anopheles arabiensis KGB at 0.5 uM measured after 24 hrs relative to control2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 02-01, Volume: 27, Issue:3
New antiprotozoal agents: Synthesis and biological evaluation of different 4-(7-chloroquinolin-4-yl) piperazin-1-yl)pyrrolidin-2-yl)methanone derivatives.
AID1102174Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) fruit flesh after 60 to 151 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID227718Binding energy by using the equation deltaG obsd = -RT ln KD1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec, Volume: 27, Issue:12
Functional group contributions to drug-receptor interactions.
AID19262Aqueous solubility2000Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jun-05, Volume: 10, Issue:11
Prediction of drug solubility from Monte Carlo simulations.
AID1102171Root bioconcentration factor assessed as compound concentration in tomato plant dry mass to compound concentration in soil dry mass after 16 to 59 days post germination2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102176Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) root after 60 to 151 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102181Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) root after 1 to 15 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1111157Resistant factor, ratio of LC50 for Aphis gossypii clone Burk (cotton aphid) to Aphis gossypii clone NM12010Pest management science, Mar, Volume: 66, Issue:3
Insecticide resistance traits differ among and within host races in Aphis gossypii.
AID1104166Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Tchollire isolated from cotton plant assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1102179Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) leaves after 60 to 151 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1104150Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Tchollire to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID588212Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in rodents2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID1102177Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) stem after 60 to 151 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102172Root bioconcentration factor assessed as compound concentration in tomato plant dry mass to compound concentration in soil dry mass after 1 to 15 days post germination2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID344083Insecticidal activity against houseflies2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-24, Volume: 51, Issue:14
Potency and selectivity of trifluoroacetylimino and pyrazinoylimino nicotinic insecticides and their fit at a unique binding site niche.
AID1104149Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Pitoa isolated from tomato plant to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1102175Octanol-water partition coefficient, log KOW of the compound2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102180Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) stem after 16 to 59 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102178Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) root after 16 to 59 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1104164Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Pitoa isolated from maize plant assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104151Resistance factor, ratio of LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Pitoa isolated from maize plant to LD50 for fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-772009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1102170Root bioconcentration factor assessed as compound concentration in tomato plant dry mass to compound concentration in soil dry mass after 60 to 151 days post germination2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID588211Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in humans2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID1111168Insecticidal activity against Aphis gossypii clone NM1 (cotton aphid) in zucchini or squash leaf assessed as mortality after 24 hr by leaf disk assay2010Pest management science, Mar, Volume: 66, Issue:3
Insecticide resistance traits differ among and within host races in Aphis gossypii.
AID1102183Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) stem after 1 to 15 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1102173Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) fruit peel after 60 to 151 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1111158Resistant factor, ratio of LC50 for Aphis gossypii clone Auber (cotton aphid) to Aphis gossypii clone NM12010Pest management science, Mar, Volume: 66, Issue:3
Insecticide resistance traits differ among and within host races in Aphis gossypii.
AID1104159Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of Helicoverpa armigera field strain Ngong isolated from cotton plant assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID1104170Insecticidal activity against fourth-instar larval stage of pyrethroid-susceptible Helicoverpa armigera laboratory strain BK-77 assessed as mortality applied topically onto thorax measured after 48 hr2009Pest management science, Oct, Volume: 65, Issue:10
Esterase-mediated resistance to pyrethroids in field populations of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from Central Africa.
AID977602Inhibition of sodium fluorescein uptake in OATP1B3-transfected CHO cells at an equimolar substrate-inhibitor concentration of 10 uM2013Molecular pharmacology, Jun, Volume: 83, Issue:6
Structure-based identification of OATP1B1/3 inhibitors.
AID1102182Drug uptake in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) leaves after 16 to 59 days post germination by GC-ECD analysis2003Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Feb-26, Volume: 51, Issue:5
Occurrence and distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) crops from organic production.
AID1296008Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening2020SLAS discovery : advancing life sciences R & D, 01, Volume: 25, Issue:1
Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated and Diverse Chemical Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening.
AID1347083qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: Viability assay - alamar blue signal for LASV Primary Screen2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347096qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for U-2 OS cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1508630Primary qHTS for small molecule stabilizers of the endoplasmic reticulum resident proteome: Secreted ER Calcium Modulated Protein (SERCaMP) assay2021Cell reports, 04-27, Volume: 35, Issue:4
A target-agnostic screen identifies approved drugs to stabilize the endoplasmic reticulum-resident proteome.
AID1347097qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Saos-2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347424RapidFire Mass Spectrometry qHTS Assay for Modulators of WT P53-Induced Phosphatase 1 (WIP1)2019The Journal of biological chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 294, Issue:46
Physiologically relevant orthogonal assays for the discovery of small-molecule modulators of WIP1 phosphatase in high-throughput screens.
AID1347425Rhodamine-PBP qHTS Assay for Modulators of WT P53-Induced Phosphatase 1 (WIP1)2019The Journal of biological chemistry, 11-15, Volume: 294, Issue:46
Physiologically relevant orthogonal assays for the discovery of small-molecule modulators of WIP1 phosphatase in high-throughput screens.
AID1347103qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for OHS-50 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347094qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-37 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347108qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh41 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347102qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh18 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347099qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB1643 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347089qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for TC32 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347090qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for DAOY cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347101qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-12 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347086qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Arenaviruses (LCMV): LCMV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347082qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: LASV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347106qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for control Hh wild type fibroblast cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347105qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for MG 63 (6-TG R) cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347407qHTS to identify inhibitors of the type 1 interferon - major histocompatibility complex class I in skeletal muscle: primary screen against the NCATS Pharmaceutical Collection2020ACS chemical biology, 07-17, Volume: 15, Issue:7
High-Throughput Screening to Identify Inhibitors of the Type I Interferon-Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Pathway in Skeletal Muscle.
AID1347107qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh30 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347095qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB-EBc1 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347091qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SJ-GBM2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347092qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for A673 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347100qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for LAN-5 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347104qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for RD cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347098qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-SH cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID651635Viability Counterscreen for Primary qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression
AID1347093qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-MC cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1745845Primary qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression
AID1347154Primary screen GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1346987P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-8-5-11 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1346986P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-3-1 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1159607Screen for inhibitors of RMI FANCM (MM2) intereaction2016Journal of biomolecular screening, Jul, Volume: 21, Issue:6
A High-Throughput Screening Strategy to Identify Protein-Protein Interaction Inhibitors That Block the Fanconi Anemia DNA Repair Pathway.
AID1159550Human Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD) Inhibitor Screening2015Nature cell biology, Nov, Volume: 17, Issue:11
6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase links oxidative PPP, lipogenesis and tumour growth by inhibiting LKB1-AMPK signalling.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (8,017)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-19904729 (58.99)18.7374
1990's539 (6.72)18.2507
2000's1180 (14.72)29.6817
2010's1269 (15.83)24.3611
2020's300 (3.74)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 96.36

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be very strong demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index96.36 (24.57)
Research Supply Index9.08 (2.92)
Research Growth Index4.57 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index182.46 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.02 (0.95)

This Compound (96.36)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials14 (0.16%)5.53%
Reviews355 (4.05%)6.00%
Case Studies27 (0.31%)4.05%
Observational3 (0.03%)0.25%
Other8,361 (95.45%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]