کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5857511 | 1132011 | 2013 | 6 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Hormone affinity, efficacy, and mass action produce biological potency thresholds.
- Normal endocrine system functioning requires and depends upon potency thresholds.
- Exogenous chemicals that act through hormonal mechanisms must also have thresholds.
- Principles of endocrinology and endocrine pharmacology dictate potency thresholds.
- The addition to background theory is inconsistent with principles of endocrinology.
Whether thresholds exist for endocrine active substances and for endocrine disrupting effects of exogenous chemicals has been posed as a question for regulatory policy by the European Union. This question arises from a concern that the endocrine system is too complex to allow estimations of safe levels of exposure to any chemical with potential endocrine activity, and a belief that any such chemical can augment, retard, or disrupt the normal background activity of endogenous hormones. However, vital signaling functions of the endocrine system require it to continuously discriminate the biological information conveyed by potent endogenous hormones from a more concentrated background of structurally similar, endogenous molecules with low hormonal potential. This obligatory ability to discriminate important hormonal signals from background noise can be used to define thresholds for induction of hormonal effects, without which normal physiological functions would be impossible. From such thresholds, safe levels of exposure can be estimated. This brief review highlights how the fundamental principles governing hormonal effects - affinity, efficacy, potency, and mass action - dictate the existence of thresholds and why these principles also define the potential that exogenous chemicals might have to interfere with normal endocrine functioning.
Journal: Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology - Volume 67, Issue 1, October 2013, Pages 83-88