FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 4,
2012
MEDIA CONTACT: David Yogi, yogi.david@epa.gov,
(415) 972-3350
U.S. EPA Awards Contract Up to
$46.7 M to South S.F., Calif. Biotechnology Company
Funding to develop predictors of human body
toxics
SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency today awarded a five-year contract, worth up to $46.7 million, to the
South San Francisco, Calif.-based company BioSeek for research to evaluate the
potential human health effects of environmental chemicals, pesticides, failed
pharmaceuticals, and nanomaterials, among other substances.
Using its rapid and cost-effective proprietary technology, BioSeek
will analyze up to 60,000 substance samples to determine the potential toxicity
effects on the human body. Rather than testing substances on animals, tests will
be conducted on extracted human cells cultures in its
laboratory.
EPA intends to use BioSeek’s findings to screen thousands of
chemicals to see if they require additional investigation.
Work is being performed by BioSeek under U.S. EPA’s ToxCast
program, which seeks to verify "toxicity signatures" of substances, such as
environmental chemicals, and catalog them to help predict adverse effects these
chemicals would have on the human body.
EPA researchers have published scientific papers showing
how ToxCast can be used to predict a chemical’s potential for liver toxicity,
developmental toxicity, reproductive toxicity and cancer. ToxCast is
supplemented by the National Academies’ Toxicity Testing in the 21st Century
Federal Agency Research collaboration that uses robotics to test the
chemicals.
For more information on BioSeek and its BioMAP technology, visit:
http://www.bioseekinc.com
For more information on ToxCast, visit: http://www.epa.gov/ncct/toxcast
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