National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
Environ Mol Mutagen. 2020 Jan;61(1):8-24. doi: 10.1002/em.22313. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
A mutagenesis moonshot addressing the influence of the environment on our genetic wellbeing was launched just 2 months before astronauts landed on the moon. Its impetus included the discovery that X-rays (Muller HJ. [1927]: Science 64:84-87) and chemicals (Auerbach and Robson. [1946]: Nature 157:302) were germ-cell mutagens, the introduction of a growing number of untested chemicals into the environment after World War II, and an increasing awareness of the role of environmental pollution on human health. Due to mounting concern from influential scientists that germ-cell mutagens might be ubiquitous in the environment, Alexander Hollaender and colleagues founded in 1969 the Environmental Mutagen Society (EMS), now the Environmental Mutagenesis and Genomics Society (EMGS); Frits Sobels founded the European EMS in 1970. As Fred de Serres noted, such societies were necessary because protecting populations from environmental mutagens could not be addressed by existing scientific societies, and new multidisciplinary alliances were required to spearhead this movement. The nascent EMS gathered policy makers and scientists from government, industry, and academia who became advocates for laws requiring genetic toxicity testing of pesticides and drugs and helped implement those laws. They created an electronic database of the mutagenesis literature; established a peer-reviewed journal; promoted basic and applied research in DNA repair and mutagenesis; and established training programs that expanded the science worldwide. Despite these successes, one objective remains unfulfilled: identification of human germ-cell mutagens. After 50 years, the voyage continues, and a vibrant EMGS is needed to bring the mission to its intended target of protecting populations from genetic hazards. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 61:8-24, 2020. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
一项针对环境对我们遗传健康影响的诱变登月计划在宇航员登陆月球前仅两个月启动。其推动力包括发现 X 射线(Muller HJ. [1927]:Science 64:84-87)和化学物质(Auerbach 和 Robson. [1946]:Nature 157:302)是生殖细胞诱变剂,第二次世界大战后越来越多未经测试的化学物质进入环境,以及人们越来越意识到环境污染对人类健康的影响。由于一些有影响力的科学家越来越担心生殖细胞诱变剂可能在环境中无处不在,亚历山大·霍兰德(Alexander Hollaender)及其同事于 1969 年成立了环境诱变协会(EMS),现在称为环境诱变与基因组学协会(EMGS);弗里茨·索贝尔斯(Frits Sobels)于 1970 年在欧洲成立了欧洲 EMS。正如弗雷德·德塞雷斯(Fred de Serres)所指出的,由于现有的科学协会无法解决保护人群免受环境诱变剂影响的问题,因此需要成立这样的协会,需要新的多学科联盟来引领这一运动。新兴的 EMS 聚集了来自政府、工业和学术界的政策制定者和科学家,他们成为要求对农药和药物进行遗传毒性测试的法律的倡导者,并帮助实施这些法律。他们创建了一个诱变文献的电子数据库;创办了一份经过同行评审的期刊;促进了 DNA 修复和诱变的基础和应用研究;并建立了培训计划,使该科学在全球范围内得到扩展。尽管取得了这些成功,但有一个目标仍未实现:确定人类生殖细胞诱变剂。50 年后,航程仍在继续,需要一个充满活力的 EMGS 来完成保护人群免受遗传危害的使命。环境。分子。突变。61:8-24,2020. 2019 年 Wiley 期刊公司版权所有。