These findings suggest that a mouldy home environment in early life is associated with an increased risk of asthma particularly in young children and allergic rhinitis symptoms in school-age children.
The exposome encompasses an individual's exposure to exogenous chemicals, as well as endogenous chemicals that are produced or altered in response to external stressors. While the exposome concept has been established for human health, its principles can be extended to include broader ecological issues. The assessment of exposure is tightly interlinked with hazard assessment. Here, we explore if mechanistic understanding of the causal links between exposure and adverse effects on human health and the environment can be improved by integrating the exposome approach with the adverse outcome pathway (AOP) concept that structures and organizes the sequence of biological events from an initial molecular interaction of a chemical with a biological target to an adverse outcome. Complementing exposome research with the AOP concept may facilitate a mechanistic understanding of stress-induced adverse effects, examine the relative contributions from various components of the exposome, determine the primary risk drivers in complex mixtures, and promote an integrative assessment of chemical risks for both human and environmental health.
The purpose of this paper is the empirical investigation of the status quo of green supply chain management in the German automotive industry from a practitioner's point of view. Several aspects of green supply chain management, such as the point of time of implementation, the driving forces, the relevance of intended goals and their particular realization and the adoption of eco-programs with suppliers and customers as well as internal and external barriers are analyzed. Furthermore, the link to different performance criteria is tested by inductive statistics in order to show the potential of green supply chain management for competitiveness. For this study, managers from the automotive supply industry in Germany were asked about their estimations in this regard. The main conclusion is that managers express the need for green supply chain management on the one hand but also see corresponding problems in terms of required resources on the other hand. Furthermore, the analyses show that green supply chain management leads to higher performance in terms of several performance criteria.
The 48 h toxicity of 18 organic narcotics, 13 epoxides, and 2 thiiranes toward the ciliates Tetrahymena pyriformis was determined in terms of 50% growth inhibition EC(50). Nominal EC(50) was corrected for volatilization and sorption to quantify the freely dissolved compound fraction in solution. The derived baseline narcosis model served to evaluate toxicity enhancements T(e) as ratios of narcosis-predicted over experimental EC(50) values. Among the nine heterocycles with aliphatic side chains that include two thiiranes, three compounds yielded T(e) > 10, suggesting their covalent binding at nucleophilic protein sites such as -OH, -NHR, and -SH through S(N)2-type ring-opening. As a general trend of this group, T(e) decreases with increasing alkyl group size. Moreover, four of the six nonaliphatic epoxides exerted substantial excess toxicities with T(e) > 10, which could be rationalized by ring-opening activation through negative inductive effect, benzylic stabilization, and phenyl ring H-bonding. By contrast, 1,2 substituted epoxides showed narcosis-level toxicity, despite the opportunity of side-chain Schiff-base formation with protein amino groups. The resulting structural alerts enable an in silico screening of epoxides and thiiranes for their potential to exert excess toxicity. Note that observed differences in T(e) sensitivity between ciliates, bacteria and fish should be taken into account when designing in vitro alternatives to fish toxicity studies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.