TY - JOUR
T1 - An "eAR" on Environmental Surveillance and Monitoring
T2 - A Case Study on the Use of Exposure-Activity Ratios (EARs) to Prioritize Sites, Chemicals, and Bioactivities of Concern in Great Lakes Waters
AU - Blackwell, Brett R.
AU - Ankley, Gerald T.
AU - Corsi, Steven R.
AU - Decicco, Laura A.
AU - Houck, Keith A.
AU - Judson, Richard S.
AU - Li, Shibin
AU - Martin, Matthew T.
AU - Murphy, Elizabeth
AU - Schroeder, Anthony L.
AU - Smith, Edwin R.
AU - Swintek, Joe
AU - Villeneuve, Daniel L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2017/8/1
Y1 - 2017/8/1
N2 - Current environmental monitoring approaches focus primarily on chemical occurrence. However, based on concentration alone, it can be difficult to identify which compounds may be of toxicological concern and should be prioritized for further monitoring, in-depth testing, or management. This can be problematic because toxicological characterization is lacking for many emerging contaminants. New sources of high-throughput screening (HTS) data, such as the ToxCast database, which contains information for over 9000 compounds screened through up to 1100 bioassays, are now available. Integrated analysis of chemical occurrence data with HTS data offers new opportunities to prioritize chemicals, sites, or biological effects for further investigation based on concentrations detected in the environment linked to relative potencies in pathway-based bioassays. As a case study, chemical occurrence data from a 2012 study in the Great Lakes Basin along with the ToxCast effects database were used to calculate exposure-activity ratios (EARs) as a prioritization tool. Technical considerations of data processing and use of the ToxCast database are presented and discussed. EAR prioritization identified multiple sites, biological pathways, and chemicals that warrant further investigation. Prioritized bioactivities from the EAR analysis were linked to discrete adverse outcome pathways to identify potential adverse outcomes and biomarkers for use in subsequent monitoring efforts.
AB - Current environmental monitoring approaches focus primarily on chemical occurrence. However, based on concentration alone, it can be difficult to identify which compounds may be of toxicological concern and should be prioritized for further monitoring, in-depth testing, or management. This can be problematic because toxicological characterization is lacking for many emerging contaminants. New sources of high-throughput screening (HTS) data, such as the ToxCast database, which contains information for over 9000 compounds screened through up to 1100 bioassays, are now available. Integrated analysis of chemical occurrence data with HTS data offers new opportunities to prioritize chemicals, sites, or biological effects for further investigation based on concentrations detected in the environment linked to relative potencies in pathway-based bioassays. As a case study, chemical occurrence data from a 2012 study in the Great Lakes Basin along with the ToxCast effects database were used to calculate exposure-activity ratios (EARs) as a prioritization tool. Technical considerations of data processing and use of the ToxCast database are presented and discussed. EAR prioritization identified multiple sites, biological pathways, and chemicals that warrant further investigation. Prioritized bioactivities from the EAR analysis were linked to discrete adverse outcome pathways to identify potential adverse outcomes and biomarkers for use in subsequent monitoring efforts.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.7b01613
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.7b01613
M3 - Article
C2 - 28671818
AN - SCOPUS:85026658126
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 51
SP - 8713
EP - 8724
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 15
ER -