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research article

Importance of Toxicokinetics for lnterspecies Variation in Sensitivity to Chemicals

Nyman, Anna-Maija
•
Schirmer, Kristin  
•
Ashauer, Roman
2014
Environmental Science & Technology

Interspecies variation in sensitivity to synthetic chemicals can be orders of magnitude large. Species traits causing the variation can be related to toxicokinetics (uptake, distribution, biotransformation, elimination) or toxicodynamics (interaction with biological target sites). We present an approach to systematically measure and model the contribution of uptake, biotransformation, internal distribution, and elimination kinetics toward species sensitivity differences. The aim is to express sensitivity as target tissue specific, internal lethal concentrations. A case study with the pesticides diazinon, imidacloprid, and propiconazole and the aquatic invertebrates Gammarus pulex, Gammarus fossarum, and Lymnaea stagnalis illustrates the approach. L. stagnalis accumulates more pesticides than Gammaridae when measured in whole organisms but less in target tissues such as the nervous system. Toxicokinetics, i.e. biotransformation and distribution, explain the higher tolerance of L. stagnalis to the insecticide diazinon when compared to Gammaridae. L. stagnalis was again more tolerant to the other neurotoxicant imidacloprid; however, the difference in sensitivity could not be explained by toxicokinetics alone, indicating the importance of toxicodynamic differences. Sensitivity to propiconazole was comparable among all species and, when expressed as internal lethal concentrations, falls in the range of baseline toxicity.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/es5005126
Web of Science ID

WOS:000336415200071

Author(s)
Nyman, Anna-Maija
Schirmer, Kristin  
Ashauer, Roman
Date Issued

2014

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

48

Issue

10

Start page

5946

End page

5954

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
TOX  
Available on Infoscience
August 29, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/106536
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