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Proposed Key Characteristics of Female Reproductive Toxicants as an Approach for Organizing and Evaluating Mechanistic Data in Hazard Assessment

Authors :
Marya G. Zlatnik
Gina Solomon
Luoping Zhang
Lauren Zeise
Brenda Eskenazi
Kenneth S. Korach
Francisco Moran
Cliona M. McHale
Russ Hauser
Martyn T. Smith
Ulrike Luderer
Osamu Udagawa
Linda Rieswijk
Institute of Data Science
RS: FSE DACS IDS
Source :
Environmental Health Perspectives, 127(7):075001. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Environmental health perspectives, vol 127, iss 7
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundIdentification of female reproductive toxicants is currently based largely on integrated epidemiological and invivo toxicology data and, to a lesser degree, on mechanistic data. A uniform approach to systematically search, organize, integrate, and evaluate mechanistic evidence of female reproductive toxicity from various data types is lacking.ObjectiveWe sought to apply a key characteristics approach similar to that pioneered for carcinogen hazard identification to female reproductive toxicant hazard identification.MethodsA working group of international experts was convened to discuss mechanisms associated with chemical-induced female reproductive toxicity and identified 10 key characteristics of chemicals that cause female reproductive toxicity: 1) alters hormone receptor signaling; alters reproductive hormone production, secretion, or metabolism; 2) chemical or metabolite is genotoxic; 3) induces epigenetic alterations; 4) causes mitochondrial dysfunction; 5) induces oxidative stress; 6) alters immune function; 7) alters cell signal transduction; 8) alters direct cell–cell interactions; 9) alters survival, proliferation, cell death, or metabolic pathways; and 10) alters microtubules and associated structures. As proof of principle, cyclophosphamide and diethylstilbestrol (DES), for which both human and animal studies have demonstrated female reproductive toxicity, display at least 5 and 3 key characteristics, respectively. 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), for which the epidemiological evidence is mixed, exhibits 5 key characteristics.DiscussionFuture efforts should focus on evaluating the proposed key characteristics against additional known and suspected female reproductive toxicants. Chemicals that exhibit one or more of the key characteristics could be prioritized for additional evaluation and testing. A key characteristics approach has the potential to integrate with pathway-based toxicity testing to improve prediction of female reproductive toxicity in chemicals and potentially prevent some toxicants from entering common use. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP4971.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15529924 and 00916765
Volume :
127
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....686daf9164f2c62417a8fa22236514c8