Non-traditional targets of endocrine disrupting chemicals: the roots of hormone signaling |
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Authors: | Fox Jennifer E |
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Affiliation: | 1 Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Department of Biology, University of Oregon, 335 Pacific Hall, Eugene, Oregon 97403 |
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Abstract: | ![]() The topic of endocrine disruption and the broad range of physiologicaleffects caused by endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) canonly be meaningfully framed within an ecological and evolutionarycontext. Environmental pollutants and EDCs operate by disruptingthe "chemical communication" that coordinates signaling withinan organism. Here we discuss how EDCs are also able to disruptthe chemical communication between plants and soil bacterianecessary for initiating nitrogen-fixing symbiosis. We alsoexamine, through examples of pollutant-related impacts on awide range of invertebrates, the need for identifying emergingtargets of EDCs. We suggest broadening the defined field ofendocrine disruption to encompass the effects of synthetic chemicalsthat interfere with signaling and communication, not only withinan organism, but also between organisms and linking ecosystems.The ecological consequences of failing to recognize novel targetsof chemical pollutants and EDCs may be a net loss of biologicaldiversity and a further imbalance of the global nitrogen cycle. |
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