Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4422504 Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Whereas ecological risk assessments rely on standardized aquatic toxicity tests to assess ecological hazards, these techniques have limited utility for endocrine-active compounds, including select pharmaceuticals. Due to structural similarity between of vertebrate estrogens and ecdysone, previous studies suggest that endocrine-active pharmaceuticals may interfere with invertebrate endocrine systems, while other investigations do not support these suggestions. We assessed effects of the pharmaceuticals 17α-ethinylestradiol and faslodex, model therapeutics designed to interact with vertebrate estrogen receptors, on endocrine biomarkers and transgenerational life-history parameters of a model invertebrate, Daphnia magna. Identical studies were performed with 20-hydroxyecdysone and testosterone, which served as positive controls for ecdysteroid receptor agonism and antagonism, respectively. Results from this study at biochemical, individual and population levels suggest that a mammalian estrogen receptor agonist and antagonist did not act through the ecdysone receptor in D. magna. Acute-to-chronic ratios based on various chronic responses ranged from 2.59 to 5.18 for 17α-ethinylestradiol and 1.29–12.9 for faslodex. Toxicity exerted by these therapeutics on D. magna likely resulted from non-endocrine-mediated responses. Mechanism-specific biomarkers, multigenerational designs and population growth models may be useful to assess organismal and population level responses to low-level exposures, which may serve to reduce uncertainty in future hazard assessments of invertebrate responses to endocrine-active pharmaceuticals in the environment.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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