PUBLICATION

Comparative toxicological pathology in mammals and fish: some examples with endocrine disrupters

Authors
Wester, P.W., van der Ven, L.T.M., and Vos, J.G.
ID
ZDB-PUB-090225-21
Date
2004
Source
Toxicology   205(1-2): 27-32 (Journal)
Registered Authors
van der Ven, Leo
Keywords
Mammals, Fish, Endocrine disrupters
MeSH Terms
none
PubMed
none Full text @ Toxicology
Abstract
Toxicologic pathology is a classical discipline in the toxicology arena, and despite various emerging techniques, still is a major cornerstone in the process of hazard identification and risk characterization. Most knowledge derives from laboratory animal studies and, to a lesser extent, human data. Currently interest is growing in applying toxicological pathology for lower animals, in particular fish as being the most developed aquatic genus. This is triggered by the interest in so-called endocrine disrupting chemicals (endocrine disrupters, EDCs), xenobiotics that interfere with the endocrine system and thus may affect reproduction and/or development, and for which pathology is an essential technique in general in vivo studies. As the aquatic ecosystem is a major recipient of pollutants, fish constitute an important potential target and can be used as a research and bio-monitoring tool. For this goal knowledge of the pathological responses of fish to EDCs is essential and therefore we have studied the responses of laboratory fish to a set of reference endocrine modulating chemicals. In this paper, such effects are compared with known response patterns in mammals, thereby accounting for the specific aspects of anatomy and physiology in fish.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping