Mukherjee Dwaipayan, Royce Steven G, Alexander Jocelyn A, Buckley Brian, Isukapalli Sastry S, Bandera Elisa V, Zarbl Helmut, Georgopoulos Panos G
Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America; Department of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Rutgers University - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America; Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America.
Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America; Department of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Rutgers University - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 4;9(12):e113632. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113632. eCollection 2014.
Zearalenone (ZEA), a fungal mycotoxin, and its metabolite zeranol (ZAL) are known estrogen agonists in mammals, and are found as contaminants in food. Zeranol, which is more potent than ZEA and comparable in potency to estradiol, is also added as a growth additive in beef in the US and Canada. This article presents the development and application of a Physiologically-Based Toxicokinetic (PBTK) model for ZEA and ZAL and their primary metabolites, zearalenol, zearalanone, and their conjugated glucuronides, for rats and for human subjects. The PBTK modeling study explicitly simulates critical metabolic pathways in the gastrointestinal and hepatic systems. Metabolic events such as dehydrogenation and glucuronidation of the chemicals, which have direct effects on the accumulation and elimination of the toxic compounds, have been quantified. The PBTK model considers urinary and fecal excretion and biliary recirculation and compares the predicted biomarkers of blood, urinary and fecal concentrations with published in vivo measurements in rats and human subjects. Additionally, the toxicokinetic model has been coupled with a novel probabilistic dietary exposure model and applied to the Jersey Girl Study (JGS), which involved measurement of mycoestrogens as urinary biomarkers, in a cohort of young girls in New Jersey, USA. A probabilistic exposure characterization for the study population has been conducted and the predicted urinary concentrations have been compared to measurements considering inter-individual physiological and dietary variability. The in vivo measurements from the JGS fall within the high and low predicted distributions of biomarker values corresponding to dietary exposure estimates calculated by the probabilistic modeling system. The work described here is the first of its kind to present a comprehensive framework developing estimates of potential exposures to mycotoxins and linking them with biologically relevant doses and biomarker measurements, including a systematic characterization of uncertainties in exposure and dose estimation for a vulnerable population.
玉米赤霉烯酮(ZEA)是一种真菌毒素,其代谢产物玉米赤霉醇(ZAL)是哺乳动物体内已知的雌激素激动剂,在食物中作为污染物被发现。玉米赤霉醇比玉米赤霉烯酮更具活性,其效力与雌二醇相当,在美国和加拿大还被作为牛肉生长添加剂添加。本文介绍了一种基于生理的毒代动力学(PBTK)模型的开发与应用,该模型用于大鼠和人类受试者体内的玉米赤霉烯酮、玉米赤霉醇及其主要代谢产物——α-玉米赤霉醇、玉米赤霉酮及其共轭葡糖苷酸。PBTK建模研究明确模拟了胃肠道和肝脏系统中的关键代谢途径。对化学物质的脱氢和葡糖醛酸化等代谢事件进行了量化,这些代谢事件对有毒化合物的积累和消除有直接影响。PBTK模型考虑了尿液和粪便排泄以及胆汁再循环,并将预测的血液、尿液和粪便浓度生物标志物与已发表的大鼠和人类受试者体内测量值进行比较。此外,该毒代动力学模型已与一种新型概率性膳食暴露模型相结合,并应用于新泽西女孩研究(JGS),该研究在美国新泽西州的一组年轻女孩中进行,涉及将霉菌雌激素作为尿液生物标志物进行测量。对研究人群进行了概率性暴露特征分析,并将预测的尿液浓度与考虑个体间生理和饮食变异性的测量值进行了比较。新泽西女孩研究的体内测量值落在与概率建模系统计算的膳食暴露估计值相对应的生物标志物值的高预测分布和低预测分布范围内。本文所述工作是同类研究中的首例,它提出了一个全面框架,用于估计霉菌毒素的潜在暴露量,并将其与生物学相关剂量和生物标志物测量值联系起来,包括对脆弱人群暴露和剂量估计不确定性的系统特征分析。