Open-Systems-Pharmacology / OSP-based-publications-and-content

Publications of all kind based on the Open Systems Pharmacology Suite
15 stars 2 forks source link

Reproductive toxicity in birds predicted by physiologically-based kinetics and bioenergetics modelling #544

Open Yuri05 opened 9 months ago

Yuri05 commented 9 months ago

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38092208/ Sci Total Environ . 2023 Dec 12:912:169096. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.169096 Thomas Martin, Barbara Bauer, Vanessa Baier, Alicia Paini, Stephan Schaller, Patrick Hubbard, Markus Ebeling, David Heckmann, André Gergs

Abstract

Effects on the growth and reproduction of birds are important endpoints in the environmental risk assessment (ERA) of pesticides. Toxicokinetic-toxicodynamic models based on dynamic energy budget theory (DEB) are promising tools to predict these effects mechanistically and make extrapolations relevant to ERA. However, before DEB-TKTD models are accepted as part of ERA for birds, ecotoxicological case studies are required so that stakeholders can assess their capabilities. We present such a case-study, modelling the effects of the fluopyram metabolite benzamide on the northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus). We parametrised a DEB-TKTD model for the embryo stage on the basis of an egg injection study, designed to provide data for model development. We found that information on various endpoints, such as survival, growth, and yolk utilisation were needed to clearly distinguish between the performance of model variants with different TKTD assumptions. The calibration data were best explained when it was assumed that chemical uptake occurs via the yolk and that benzamide places stress on energy assimilation and mobilisation. To be able to bridge from the in vitro tests to real-life exposure, we developed a physiologically-based toxicokinetic (PBK) model for the quail and used it to predict benzamide exposure inside the eggs based on dietary exposure in a standard reproductive toxicity study. We then combined the standard DEB model with the TKTD module calibrated to the egg injection studies and used it to predict effects on hatchling and 14-day chick weight based on the exposure predicted by the PBK model. Observed weight reductions, relative to controls, were accurately predicted. Thus, we demonstrate that DEB-TKTD models, in combination with suitable experimental data and, if necessary, with an exposure model, can be used in bird ERA to predict chemical effects on reproduction.