Landrigan Philip J, Wright Robert O, Cordero Jose F, Eaton David L, Goldstein Bernard D, Hennig Bernhard, Maier Raina M, Ozonoff David M, Smith Martyn T, Tukey Robert H
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2015 Oct;123(10):909-18. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1409247. Epub 2015 May 15.
The Superfund Research Program (SRP) is an academically based, multidisciplinary, translational research program that for 25 years has sought scientific solutions to health and environmental problems associated with hazardous waste sites. SRP is coordinated by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). It supports multi-project grants, undergraduate and postdoctoral training programs, individual research grants, and Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Technology Transfer Research (STTR) grants.
SRP has had many successes: discovery of arsenic's toxicity to the developing human central nervous system; documentation of benzene toxicity to hematologic progenitor cells in human bone marrow; development of novel analytic techniques such as the luciferase expression assay and laser fragmentation fluorescence spectroscopy; demonstration that PCBs can cause developmental neurotoxicity at low levels and alter the genomic characteristics of sentinel animals; elucidation of the neurodevelopmental toxicity of organophosphate insecticides; documentation of links between antimicrobial agents and alterations in hormone response; discovery of biological mechanisms through which environmental chemicals may contribute to obesity, atherosclerosis, diabetes, and cancer; tracking the health and environmental effects of the attacks on the World Trade Center and Hurricane Katrina; and development of novel biological and engineering techniques to facilitate more efficient and lower-cost remediation of hazardous waste sites.
SRP must continue to address the legacy of hazardous waste in the United States, respond to new issues caused by rapid advances in technology, and train the next generation of leaders in environmental health science while recognizing that most of the world's worst toxic hot spots are now located in low- and middle-income countries.
超级基金研究计划(SRP)是一个基于学术的多学科转化研究计划,25年来一直在寻求科学解决方案,以应对与危险废物场地相关的健康和环境问题。SRP由美国国家环境卫生科学研究所(NIEHS)协调。它支持多项目资助、本科和博士后培训计划、个人研究资助以及小企业创新研究(SBIR)和技术转让研究(STTR)资助。
SRP取得了许多成功:发现砷对发育中的人类中枢神经系统有毒性;记录苯对人类骨髓中血液祖细胞的毒性;开发了诸如荧光素酶表达测定和激光碎裂荧光光谱等新型分析技术;证明多氯联苯在低水平时可导致发育性神经毒性并改变哨兵动物的基因组特征;阐明有机磷杀虫剂的神经发育毒性;记录抗菌剂与激素反应改变之间的联系;发现环境化学物质可能导致肥胖、动脉粥样硬化、糖尿病和癌症的生物学机制;追踪世贸中心袭击事件和卡特里娜飓风对健康和环境的影响;以及开发新型生物和工程技术,以促进更高效、低成本地修复危险废物场地。
SRP必须继续应对美国危险废物遗留问题,应对技术快速发展带来的新问题,并培养下一代环境卫生科学领域的领导者,同时认识到世界上大多数最严重的有毒热点地区现在位于低收入和中等收入国家。