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DEDuCT 3.0: An enhanced and expanded FAIR-compliant resource and toxicology knowledge graph for endocrine disrupting chemicals

Chivukula, N.; Vashishth, S.; Kandasamy, P.; Madgaonkar, S. R.; Samal, A.

2026-01-26 pharmacology and toxicology
10.64898/2026.01.23.701267 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are of particular regulatory and research interest due to the increasing incidence of endocrine-related disorders, such as declining fertility rates and reproductive health problems. The Database of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals and their Toxicity Profiles (DEDuCT) has gained importance in both academic and regulatory settings by systematically curating data from published literature to characterize these chemicals. Given the growing body of EDC literature, this study aimed to consolidate the latest research and update this critical database. First, more than 14000 research articles were screened through an extensive four-stage manual process, and integrated with the earlier version to create the updated DEDuCTv3.0, comprising 1043 unique EDCs and 796 unique endocrine-related endpoints curated from 3269 published articles. Thereafter, human- and rodent-specific biological endpoint data including interacting genes/proteins, phenotypes, diseases, and adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) were curated from toxicology-relevant databases and systematically integrated with DEDuCTv3.0 to construct a large-scale toxicology knowledge graph for EDCs, termed DEDuCT-KG. DEDuCT-KG was then hosted on a Neo4j database and made easily accessible through a novel interactive user interface. The utility of DEDuCT-KG was demonstrated by exploring potential mechanisms of action associated with obesogenic EDCs within DEDuCTv3.0. Furthermore, the constructed EDC-AOP network, linking 949 EDCs to 381 AOPs within AOP-Wiki, revealed diverse toxicity mechanisms associated with EDCs. Integration with consumer product database and regulatory chemical lists showed that some of these EDCs are present in food contact materials, personal care products, and daily use items, highlighting potential exposure pathways. Overall, all data compiled in this study have been integrated into the DEDuCT webserver, which has been further enhanced to align with FAIR principles. In sum, this study provides a much-needed update to DEDuCT and offers a single point of access to EDC-relevant data to accelerate research and regulation of EDCs.

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