Environmental science & technology.
Publisher:
American Chemical Society,. Washington DC : American Chemical Society
Frequency: Semimonthly, 1998-
Country: United States
Language: English
Author(s):
American Chemical Society.
Start Year:1967 -
ISSN:
0013-936X (Print)
1520-5851 (Electronic)
0013-936X (Linking)
1520-5851 (Electronic)
0013-936X (Linking)
Impact Factor
11.4
2022
| NLM ID: | 0213155 |
| (DNLM): | E10680000(s) |
| (OCoLC): | 01568096 |
| Coden: | ESTHAG |
| Classification: | W1 EN985S |
New Evidence for the Mechanisms of Nanoplastics Amplifying Cadmium Cytotoxicity: Trojan Horse Effect, Inflammatory Response, and Calcium Imbalance. Nanoplastics (NPs) are emerging pollutants worldwide. Particularly worrisome is that although studies have reported that NPs can amplify the biotoxicity of environmental pollutants, the specific mechanism remains unclear. Here, we found that NPs, even without significant toxicity (cell survival: 99.11%), amplified the hepatocyte toxicity of Cd. Mechanistically, higher Cd uptake (Δ = 23.80%) combined with crucial intracellular desorption behavior of Cd loaded in NPs (desorption rate: 82.70%) were identified as prerequisites for NPs amplifying Cd cytotoxicity. As for toxigenic pathways, the inf...
Domestic Dogs and Horses as Sentinels of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substance Exposure and Associated Health Biomarkers in Gray’s Creek North Carolina. Central North Carolina (NC) is highly contaminated with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), in part due to local fluorochemical production. Little is known about the exposure profiles and long-term health impacts for humans and animals that live in nearby communities. In this study, serum PFAS concentrations were determined using liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry and diagnostic clinical chemistry endpoints were assessed for 31 dogs and 32 horses that reside in Gray's Creek NC at households with documented PFAS contamination in their drinking water. PFAS were detec...
Declining-but persistent-atmospheric contamination in central California from the resuspension of historic leaded gasoline emissions as recorded in the lace lichen (Ramalina menziesii Taylor) from 1892 to 2006. Analyses of lead concentration and isotopic composition of recent and archived samples of the lace lichen (Ramalina menziesii) chronicle more than a century of atmospheric lead contamination in central California. The contamination extends back to our oldest sample from 1892, when lead levels in lichen from the northern reach of the San Francisco Bay estuary were 9-12 microg/g and their isotopic composition corresponded to those of high lead emissions from the Selby smelter (e.g., (206)Pb/(207)Pb = 1.165) that were killing horses in adjacent fields at that time. By the mid-1950s lead isotopic ...
Environmental health impacts of equine estrogens derived from hormone replacement therapy. Many factors have been considered in evaluations of the risk-benefit balance of hormone replacement therapy (HRT), used for treating menopausal symptoms in women, but not its potential risks for the environment We investigated the possible environmental health implications of conjugated equine estrogens (CEEs), the most common components of HRT, including their discharge into the environment, their uptake, potency, and ability to induce biological effects in wildlife. Influents and effluents from four U.K. sewage treatment works (STWs), and bile of effluent-exposed fish, were screened for six ...