Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 2011 Oct;123(2):349-58. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfr185. Epub 2011 Jul 12.
The fish early life-stage (FELS) test guideline (OECD 210 or OCSPP 850.1400) is the most frequently used bioassay for predicting chronic fish toxicity and supporting aquatic ecological risk assessments around the world. For each chemical, the FELS test requires a minimum of 360 fish and 1 to 3 months from test initiation to termination. Although valuable for predicting fish full life-cycle toxicity, FELS tests are labor and resource intensive and, due to an emphasis on apical endpoints, provide little to no information about chemical mode of action. Therefore, the development and implementation of alternative testing strategies for screening and prioritizing chemicals has the potential to reduce the cost and number of animals required for estimating FELS toxicity and, at the same time, provides insights into mechanisms of toxicity. Using three reference chemicals with well-established yet distinct adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) in early life stages of fish, we proposed FELS-specific AOPs as conceptual frameworks for identifying useful chemical screening and prioritization strategies. The reference chemicals selected as case studies were a cardiotoxic aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonist (2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin), neurotoxic acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (chlorpyrifos), and narcotic surfactant (linear alkylbenzene sulfonate). Using qualitative descriptions for each chemical during early fish development, we developed generalized AOPs and, based on these examples, proposed a three-tiered testing strategy for screening and prioritizing chemicals for FELS testing. Linked with biologically based concentration-response models, a tiered testing strategy may help reduce the reliance on long-term and costly FELS tests required for assessing the hazard of thousands of chemicals currently in commerce.
鱼类早期生活阶段(FELS)测试指南(OECD 210 或 OCSPP 850.1400)是目前世界范围内预测鱼类慢性毒性和支持水生生态风险评估最常用的生物测定方法。对于每种化学物质,FELS 测试需要至少 360 条鱼,并从测试开始到结束需要 1 到 3 个月。尽管 FELS 测试对于预测鱼类全生命周期毒性非常有价值,但它需要大量的人力和物力,并且由于强调顶点终点,几乎没有提供有关化学作用模式的信息。因此,开发和实施替代测试策略来筛选和优先考虑化学物质有可能降低估计 FELS 毒性所需的成本和动物数量,同时提供有关毒性机制的见解。我们使用三个具有既定但又截然不同的早期生命阶段鱼类不良结局途径(AOP)的参考化学物质,提出了特定于 FELS 的 AOP,作为识别有用的化学筛选和优先排序策略的概念框架。选定的参考化学物质作为案例研究,分别是心脏毒性芳烃受体激动剂(2,3,7,8-四氯二苯并对二恶英)、神经毒性乙酰胆碱酯酶抑制剂(毒死蜱)和麻醉表面活性剂(直链烷基苯磺酸盐)。我们使用每个化学物质在早期鱼类发育过程中的定性描述,开发了广义 AOP,并基于这些示例,提出了一种用于筛选和优先考虑 FELS 测试化学物质的三级测试策略。与基于生物学的浓度-反应模型相关联,分层测试策略可能有助于减少对评估目前商业上数千种化学物质危害所需的长期和昂贵的 FELS 测试的依赖。