Biomarkers as Predictors in Health and Ecological Risk Assessment |
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Authors: | Janice E. Chambers J. Scott Boone Russell L. Carr Howard W. Chambers David L. Straus |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for Environmental Health Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS 39762-6100;2. Tel (voice): 662-325-1255, Tel(fax): 662-325-1031, chambers@cvm.msstate.edu;3. Tel (voice): 662-325-1255, Tel(fax): 662-325-1031;4. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State MS 39762-9775 |
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Abstract: | Biomarkers are measurable biological parameters that change in response to xenobiotic exposure and other environmental or physiological stressors, and can be indices of toxicant exposure or effects. If the biomarkers are sufficiently specific and well characterized, they can have great utility in the risk assessment process by providing an indication of the degree of exposure of humans or animals in natural populations to a specific xenobiotic or class of xenobiotics. Most biomarkers are effective as indices of exposure, but adequate information is rarely available on the appropriate dose-response curves to have well-described biomarkers of effect that can be widely applicable to additional populations. Specific examples of acetylcholinest-erase inhibition following exposure to organophosphorus insecticides are cited from experiments in both mammals (rats) and fish. These experiments have indicated that the degree of inhibition can be readily influenced by endogenous (e.g., age) and exogenous (e.g., chemical exposures) factors, and that the degree of inhibition is not readily correlated with toxicological effects. Caution is urged, therefore, in an attempt to utilize biomarkers in the risk assessment process until more complete documentation is available on the specificity, sensitivity, and time course of changes, and on the impact of multiple exposures or the time of exposures. |
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Keywords: | acetylcholinesterase organophosphorus insecticides exposure biomarkers effects biomarkers species differences. |
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