Human and ecological risk assessment of a crop protection chemical: a case study with the azole fungicide epoxiconazole

被引:67
作者
Chambers, Janice E. [1 ]
Greim, Helmut [2 ]
Kendall, Ronald J. [3 ,4 ]
Segner, Helmut [5 ]
Sharpe, Richard M. [6 ]
Van Der Kraak, Glen [7 ]
机构
[1] Mississippi State Univ, Coll Vet Med, Ctr Environm Hlth Sci, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA
[2] Tech Univ Munich, Inst Toxicol & Environm Hyg, Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[3] Texas Tech Univ, Dept Environm Toxicol, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
[4] Texas Tech Univ, Inst Environm & Human Hlth, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
[5] Univ Bern, Vetsuisse Fac, Ctr Fish & Wildlife Hlth, Bern, Switzerland
[6] MRC Univ Edinburgh Ctr Reprod Hlth, Queens Med Res Inst, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[7] Univ Guelph, Dept Integrat Biol, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
关键词
Azoles; azole fungicides; endocrine disruption; epoxiconazole; risk assessment; AROMATASE INHIBITOR LETROZOLE; MINNOW PIMEPHALES-PROMELAS; MESSENGER-RNA EXPRESSION; GENETIC FEMALE CHICKENS; SEX-REVERSAL; RETINOIC ACID; XENOPUS-LAEVIS; IN-VITRO; TRIAZOLE FUNGICIDE; P450; AROMATASE;
D O I
10.3109/10408444.2013.855163
中图分类号
R99 [毒物学(毒理学)];
学科分类号
100405 ;
摘要
Conventional risk assessments for crop protection chemicals compare the potential for causing toxicity (hazard identification) to anticipated exposure. New regulatory approaches have been proposed that would exclude exposure assessment and just focus on hazard identification based on endocrine disruption. This review comprises a critical analysis of hazard, focusing on the relative sensitivity of endocrine and non-endocrine endpoints, using a class of crop protection chemicals, the azole fungicides. These were selected because they are widely used on important crops (e. g. grains) and thereby can contact target and non-target plants and enter the food chain of humans and wildlife. Inhibition of lanosterol 14 alpha-demethylase (CYP51) mediates the antifungal effect. Inhibition of other CYPs, such as aromatase (CYP19), can lead to numerous toxicological effects, which are also evident from high dose human exposures to therapeutic azoles. Because of its widespread use and substantial database, epoxiconazole was selected as a representative azole fungicide. Our critical analysis concluded that anticipated human exposure to epoxiconazole would yield a margin of safety of at least three orders of magnitude for reproductive effects observed in laboratory rodent studies that are postulated to be endocrine-driven (i.e. fetal resorptions). The most sensitive ecological species is the aquatic plant Lemna (duckweed), for which the margin of safety is less protective than for human health. For humans and wildlife, endocrine disruption is not the most sensitive endpoint. It is concluded that conventional risk assessment, considering anticipated exposure levels, will be protective of both human and ecological health. Although the toxic mechanisms of other azole compounds may be similar, large differences in potency will require a case-by-case risk assessment
引用
收藏
页码:176 / 210
页数:35
相关论文
共 229 条
  • [1] Abinawanto Kiyoshi Shimada, 1997, Japanese Poultry Science, V34, P158
  • [2] The retinoic acid-metabolizing enzyme, CYP26A1, is essential for normal hindbrain patterning, vertebral identity, and development of posterior structures
    Abu-Abed, S
    Dollé, P
    Metzger, D
    Beckett, B
    Chambon, P
    Petkovich, M
    [J]. GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 2001, 15 (02) : 226 - 240
  • [3] Vitamin A and clefting: putative biological mechanisms
    Ackermans, Mignon M. G.
    Zhou, Huiqing
    Carels, Carine E. L.
    Wagener, Frank A. D. T. G.
    Von den Hoff, Johannes W.
    [J]. NUTRITION REVIEWS, 2011, 69 (10) : 613 - 624
  • [4] Comet assay in phytoplankton as biomarker of genotoxic effects of environmental pollution
    Akcha, F.
    Arzul, G.
    Rousseau, S.
    Bardouil, M.
    [J]. MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2008, 66 (01) : 59 - 61
  • [5] The role of estrogen in the maintenance of primate pregnancy
    Albrecht, ED
    Aberdeen, GW
    Pepe, GJ
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2000, 182 (02) : 432 - 438
  • [6] Imidazole derivative KK-42 reduces ecdysteroid titers and interferes with reproductive processes in adult females of Tenebrio molitor
    Amrani, L
    Zerguine, K
    Farine, JP
    Smagghe, G
    Soltani-Mazouni, N
    [J]. PESTICIDE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 80 (03) : 163 - 172
  • [7] Evaluation of a 40 day assay for testing endocrine disrupters:: Effects of an anti-estrogen and an aromatase inhibitor on sex ratio and vitellogenin concentrations in juvenile zebrafish (Danio rerio)
    Andersen, L
    Kinnberg, K
    Holbech, H
    Korsgaard, B
    Bjerregaard, P
    [J]. FISH PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, 2004, 30 (3-4) : 257 - 266
  • [8] Ketoconazole in the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas):: Reproductive toxicity and biological compensation
    Ankley, Gerald T.
    Jensen, Kathleen M.
    Kahl, Michael D.
    Makynen, Elizabeth A.
    Blake, Lindsey S.
    Greene, Katie J.
    Johnson, Rodney D.
    Villeneuve, Daniel L.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY, 2007, 26 (06) : 1214 - 1223
  • [9] Toxicogenomics in regulatory ecotoxicology
    Ankley, Gerald T.
    Daston, George P.
    Degitz, Sigmund J.
    Denslow, Nancy D.
    Hoke, Robert A.
    Kennedy, Sean W.
    Miracle, Ann L.
    Perkins, Edward J.
    Snape, Jason
    Tillitt, Donald E.
    Tyler, Charles R.
    Versteeg, Donald
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2006, 40 (13) : 4055 - 4065
  • [10] A time-course analysis of effects of the steroidogenesis inhibitor ketoconazole on components of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis of fathead minnows
    Ankley, Gerald T.
    Cavallin, Jenna E.
    Durhan, Elizabeth J.
    Jensen, Kathleen M.
    Kahl, Michael D.
    Makynen, Elizabeth A.
    Thomas, Linnea M.
    Wehmas, Leah C.
    Villeneuve, Daniel L.
    [J]. AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY, 2012, 114 : 88 - 95