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` What is toxicology? Definitions of Toxicology • The science that studies the poisonous, or toxic, properties of substances. – (NSC) • The study of chemical and physical agents that produce adverse responses in the biological systems with which they interact. – Williams and Burson • The study of the adverse effect of chemical agents on biological systems. – (Cassaret and Doull). Definition of Toxicology – The study of the adverse effects of xenobiotics on living organisms • What is a “xenobiotic”? – Foreign compound – Chemicals that are not endogenous to the biological system – Chemicals that have little or no value in sustaining normal biochemistry/cell function Modern Toxicology • Exogeneous agents • Endogenous compounds – Oxygen radical – Reactive intermediates generated from xenobiotics and endobiotics Contributions of toxicologists • Mechanism of action • Exposure to chemicals as a cause of illness • Using toxic chemicals to understand physiological phenomena • Recognition, identification and quantification of hazards from occupational exposure and public health aspects of chemicals in the environment, food and drugs. • Involved in discovery and development of new drugs, food additives, and pesticides • Development of standards and regulations designed to protect human health and environment from the adverse effects of chemicals History of Toxicology The "father" of toxicology (1493-1541). He determined chemicals were responsible for plant or animal that specific actually the toxicity of a poison. Paracelsus is often quoted for his statement: "All substances are poisons; there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy." "The dose makes the poison.“ Bernardino Ramazzini (1633-1714) Bernardino Ramazzini (1633-1714): Percival Pott (1715 – 1788) correlation between the occupation of chimney sweeps and scrotal cancer Mathieu Orfila (1787-1853) the father of modern toxicology –First to use autopsy material and chemical analysis to prove if someone was poisoned (forensic toxicology) –Wrote the first book on toxicology ,A General System of Toxicology, in 1815 Modern Toxicology •During the last two or three decades, toxicology has entered a phase of rapid development and has changed from a science that was almost entirely descriptive, to one in which the mechanisms of action are widely studied •Much of this exponential growth can be attributed to the WWII era. Greater use of industrial chemicals, organic compounds used as anesthetics, “patent” medicines, Upton Sinclair’s book The Jungle describing the meat packing industry…all of these things brought about the signing of the Wiley Bill – first of many food/drug laws 19th Century: Industrial Revolution Phosgene (COCl2) and mustard gas (bis[Bchloroethyl]sulfide) used in WW1. By 1880 over 10,000 organic compounds had been synthesized (chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, many petroleum products) Late 1800’s- early 1900’s Development of early advances in analytic methods Early mechanistic studies Introduction of new toxicants and antidotes •After World War II “You too can be a toxicologist in two easy lessons, each of ten years” – Arnold Lehman •1950s - U.S. FDA was strengthen under Lehman’s leadership –Formulized an experimental program for the appraisal of food, drug, and cosmetic safety –Delaney clause – no carcinogens in the food supply –What constitutes a carcinogen? –“One Hit” model –Analytical detection limits…20 to 100 ppm then, now ppt is common and ppq are possible •1960s… –Thalidomide incident –Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring –2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD or dioxin) – contaminant in Agent Orange •1970s… –EPA, OSHA –Love Canal –Toxic Substances Control Act –Suferfund Bill Recently, a new public concern ‘environmental hormone’ or ‘endocrine disruptor’ Mechanistic Toxicology • Identification and understanding cellular, biochemical and molecular basis by which chemicals exert toxic effects. – Saccharin and bladder cancer – Thalidomide – 6-mercaptopurine leukemia Descriptive Toxicology: • The science of toxicity testing to provide information for safety evaluation and regulatory requirements. -Toxicity tests Regulatory Toxicology • Determination of risk based on descriptive and mechanistic studies, and developing safety regulations. – FDA (FFDCA) – EPA (TSCA, FIFRA) – OSHA Forensic Toxicology: the cause of death in a postmortem investigation Clinical Toxicology: Diagnosis and treatment of poisoning; evaluation of methods of detection and intoxication, mechanism of action in humans and animals 毒藥物防治諮詢 http://www.pcc.vghtpe.gov.tw/index.asp Occupational Toxicology: Combines occupational medicine and occupational hygeine. Environmental Toxicology: Integrates toxicology with sub-disciplines such as ecology, wildlife and aquatic biology, environmental chemistry. Spectrum of toxic Dose A common dose measurement is mg/kg body weight. The commonly used time unit is one day and thus, the usual dosage unit is mg/kg/day. Environmental exposure units are expressed as the amount of a xenobiotic in a unit of the media. mg/liter (mg/l) for liquids mg/gram (mg/g) for solids mg/cubic meter (mg/m3) for air Other commonly used dose units for substances in media are parts per million (ppm), parts per billion (ppb) and parts per trillion (ppt). The most important parameters for dosage are the number of doses, frequency, and total time period of the treatment. For example: 650 mg Tylenol as a single dose 500 mg Penicillin every 8 hours for 10 days 10 mg DDT per day for 90 days Fractionating a total dose usually decreases the probability that the total dose will cause toxicity. The reason for this is that the body often can repair the effect of each subtoxic dose if sufficient time passes before receiving the next dose. In such a case, the total dose, harmful if received all at once, is non-toxic when administered over a period of time. For example, 30 mg of strychnine swallowed at one time could be fatal to an adult whereas 3 mg of strychnine swallowed each day for ten days would not be fatal. Classification of toxic agents Many ways to classify a chemical: Target organ (liver, kidney) Use (food additive, drug, pesticide) Source (animal or plant) Effects (carcinogen, mutagen) Physical state (gas, liquid) Chemistry (Amine, hydrocarbon) Poisoning potential (extremely toxic, slight toxic, etc) Biochemical mechanism of action (alkylating agent, AchE inhibitor) "Toxin"=refers to toxic substances that are produced by biological systems "Toxicant"=substance that is produced by anthropogenic origin Spectrum of undesired effects Each drug produces a number of effects, but only one is associated with the primary objective of the therapy; all other effects are considered undesirable or side effects. Side effects may be beneficial (antihistamine) The effects that are always undesirable are referred to as adverse, deleterious or toxic effects of the drug. 1. Allergic Reactions • Chemical allergy is an immunologically mediated adverse reaction to a chemical • Results from previous sensitization to the chemical or to a structurally similar one. 2. Idiosyncratic Reactions • Genetically determined abnormal reactivity to a chemical. (polymorphisms) • The response observed is usually qualitatively similar to that observed in other individuals but may take the form of extreme sensitivity/insensitivity to the chemical. • Succinylcholine and prolonged apnea (butyrylcholinesterase) • Stevens-Johnson syndrome carbamazepine, phenytoin, allopurinol 3. Immediate versus delayed Toxicity • Immediate responses are those that occur rapidly after a single administration of a substance • Delayed toxic effects are those that occur after a lapse of some time. • Cancer is example of delayed (20-30 years) 4. Reversible versus Irreversible Toxic Effects • If a chemical produces pathological injury to a tissue the ability of that tissue to repair itself will determine whether the effect is reversible to irreversible. – Liver regenerates rapidly – CNS does not – Carcinogenic and teratogenic effects are generally irreversible 5. Local versus Systemic Toxicity • Local effects occur at the site of first contact between the biological system and the toxicant. • Systemic effects require absorption and distribution of a toxicant from its entry point to a distant site at which deleterious effects are produced. Interaction of Chemicals • Additive: When the combined effect of the two chemicals is equal to the sum of the effects of each agent given alone. (2+2=4) Synergistic: When the combined effect of the two chemicals is far greater than the sum of the effects of each agent given alone (2+2=10) E. Interaction of Chemicals Potentiation: Occurs when one substance has no toxic effect but when added to another chemical makes that one much more toxic (0+2=10). Antagonism: Occurs when two chemicals administered together interfere with each others action or one interferes with the action of the other (2+2=1; 4+0=2) E. Interaction of Chemicals Antagonism (con’t) Functional: Occurs when two chemicals counter balance each other by producing opposite effects on the same physiological function Chemical: A chemical reaction between two chemicals that produces a less toxic product. E. Interaction of Chemicals • Antagonism (con’t) – Dispositional: Occurs when the disposition is altered or the concentration or duration of action and the target site is diminished. – Receptor: When two chemicals bind to the same receptor and produce less of an effect than the two when given separately (2+2=2 or 2+0=0). Tolerance Tolerance is a state of decreased responsiveness to a toxic effect of a chemical resulting prior exposure to that chemical or to a structurally related chemical. Dispositional tolerance CCl4-decrease reactive metabolite Cd-induction of metallothionein Reduced responsiveness Whether a toxic response occurs is dependent on The chemical and physical property of the agent The exposure situation How the agent is metabolized by the system or subject Exposure: Pathways • Routes and Sites of Exposure – Ingestion (Gastrointestinal Tract) – Inhalation (Lungs) – Dermal/Topical (Skin) – Injection • intravenous, intramuscular, intraperitoneal • Typical Effectiveness of Route of Exposure iv > inhale > ip > im > ingest > topical Exposure: Duration Acute exposure Subacute Subchronic Chronic < 24hr usually 1 1 month repeated doses 1-3mo repeated doses > 3mo repeated doses Over time, the amount of chemical in the body can build up, it can redistribute, or it can overwhelm repair and removal mechanisms Dose Response The dose-response relationship is a fundamental and essential concept in toxicology. It correlates exposures and the spectrum of induced effects. Generally, the higher the dose, the more severe the response. The dose-response relationship is based on observed data from experimental animal, human clinical, or cell studies. Knowledge of the dose-response relationship: establishes causality that the chemical has in fact induced the observed effects establishes the lowest dose where an induced effect occurs - the threshold effect determines the rate at which injury builds up - the slope for the dose response. Dose Response Individual, or graded, dose-response relationship results from an alteration of a specific biochemical process Quantal dose-response relationship in a population-”all or none” determination of the LD50 Normal equivalent deviations(NEDs) NED for 50% response is 0 NED for 84.1% response is 1 Probit (probability unit)=NED+5 Classical LD50 The Classical LD50 test is used to determine the lethal dose (LD50) of a substance that will kill 50% of test animals. Typically, this method can use 100 or more animals. The test material is administered in increasing doses, usually 5 or more, to groups of 10 male and 10 female animals. Mortalities are recorded within a given period, and the LD50 is determined with the aid of statistical calculations. Median lethal dose = LD50 Therapeutic index provides safety index expresses as ratio of lethal or toxic dose to therapeutic dose: TI = LD50/ED50 (larger ratio indicates greater margin of safety) Margin of Safety = TD1/ED99 Variation in toxic responses • Selective toxicity Biological diversity -Uneconomic form vs. economic form (parasite vs. host) Difference in -Accumulation, absorption, biotransformation, or excretion of the toxicant -cytology, -biochemistry • Species differences -Lethal dose for TCDD in guinea pig and human -Responses to carcinogens • Individual difference Genetic polymorphism Descriptive animal toxicity tests Two main principle 1. The effects produced by a compound in laboratory animals, when properly qualified, are applicable to humans. 2. The exposure of experimental animals to toxic agents in high dose is necessary and valid method of discovering possible hazards in human. Testing Scheme for toxicological evaluation of New chemicals • Fig.2-11 • Table 2.3 Descriptive animal toxicity tests Acute Single dose with effects occurring for a short period of time (usually up to 96 hr) Inhalation-4h Acute lethality LD50 (Median Lethal Concentration) Skin & eye irritation Sensitization Multiple administrations over 34 weeks Subacute Multiple doses administered for up to 14 days establish doses for subchronic study Subchronic Continuous dosing for up to 90 days NOAEL-no observed adverse effect level Chronic Continuous dosing for up to 6 months to 2 years carcinogenic potential • Acute effects do not predict chronic effects • Doses causing chronic effects may not cause acute or sub-acute effects • Chronic effects of a chemical exposure may manifest themselves as a common disease and go unnoticed 2. Limit Test Acute toxicity test in which, if no ill-effects occur at a pre-selected maximum dose, no further testing at greater exposure levels is required. Five to ten animals of each sex or 10 animals of the susceptible sex are administered a dose specified by regulations. Toxic responses occurring within a given period are recorded. Based on the results, a regulatory action or additional testing may be required. CURRENT POLICIES Food and Drug Administration: •Does not require the use of the Classical LD50 test. •Accepts alternatives. •Refers to the Limit test. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development: •Discourages the use of Classical LD50 test. •Recommends the Limit test (2 g/kg dose). •When compound related mortality occurs in the limit test, then 5 animals per dose, at least 3 dose levels are used to produce a range of toxic effects and mortality rates; clinical observations and pathological investigations are conducted. •A fixed dose procedure, which uses morbidity instead of mortality as the end point, is also recommended. British Toxicology Society: •The LD50 should only be determined with any accuracy where scientifically and ethically justified. Such cases are relatively rare. •Examination of few animals in detail rather than many for statistical purposes. •Limit tests could be used, provided animals in distress are killed humanely, if this would not interfere with the objectives. •For classification of substances and preparations, a fixed-dose procedure targeted to acute signs could replace the current practice of LD50 determination. Toxicogenomics • • • • Genomics Transcriptomics Proteomics Metabonomics/metabolomics small molecules in metabolic process • Bioinformatics Homework: 1. Define the following term for interaction of chemicals: additive synergistic potentiation chemical antagonism disposition antagonism idiosyncratic reaction 2.Explain the concept of “hormesis”. 3. What are the goals of acute, subacute, subchronic, chronic toxicity tests? 4. Some people are very sensitive to nitrite and suffer from a serious lack of oxygen delivery to tissue, explain the reason.