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Adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) for radiation-induced reproductive effects in environmental species: state of science and identification of a consensus AOP network

Tollefson, KE; Alonzo, F; Beresford, NA; Brede, DA; Dufourcq-Sekatcheff, E; Gilbin, R; Horemans, N; Hurem, S; Laloi, P; Maremonti, E; Oughton, D; Simon, Olivier; Song, Y; Wood, M; Xie, L; Frelon, S

Adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) for radiation-induced reproductive effects in environmental species: state of science and identification of a consensus AOP network Thumbnail


Authors

KE Tollefson

F Alonzo

NA Beresford

DA Brede

E Dufourcq-Sekatcheff

R Gilbin

N Horemans

S Hurem

P Laloi

E Maremonti

D Oughton

Olivier Simon

Y Song

Profile image of Mike Wood

Prof Mike Wood M.D.Wood@salford.ac.uk
Associate Dean Research & Innovation

L Xie

S Frelon



Abstract

Background
Reproductive effects of ionizing radiation in organisms have been observed under laboratory and field conditions. Such assessments often rely on associations between exposure and effects, and thus lacking a detailed mechanistic understanding of causality between effects occurring at different levels of biological organization. The Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP), a conceptual knowledge framework to capture, organize, evaluate and visualize the scientific knowledge of relevant toxicological effects, has the potential to evaluate the causal relationships between molecular, cellular, individual, and population effects. This paper presents the first development of a set of consensus AOPs for reproductive effects of ionizing radiation in wildlife. This work was performed by a group of experts formed during a workshop organized jointly by the Multidisciplinary European Low Dose Initiative (MELODI) and the European Radioecology Alliance (ALLIANCE) associations to present the AOP approach and tools. The work presents a series of taxon-specific case studies that were used to identify relevant empirical evidence, identify common AOP components and propose a set of consensus AOPs that could be organized into an AOP network with broader taxonomic applicability.

Conclusion
Expert consultation led to the identification of key biological events and description of causal linkages between ionizing radiation, reproductive impairment and reduction in population fitness. The study characterized the knowledge domain of taxon-specific AOPs, identified knowledge gaps pertinent to reproductive-relevant AOP development and reflected on how AOPs could assist applications in radiation (radioecological) research, environmental health assessment, and radiological protection. Future advancement and consolidation of the AOPs is planned to include structured weight of evidence considerations, formalized review and critical assessment of the empirical evidence prior to formal submission and review by the OECD sponsored AOP development program.

Citation

Tollefson, K., Alonzo, F., Beresford, N., Brede, D., Dufourcq-Sekatcheff, E., Gilbin, R., …Frelon, S. (2022). Adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) for radiation-induced reproductive effects in environmental species: state of science and identification of a consensus AOP network. International Journal of Radiation Biology, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2022.2110317

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 2, 2022
Online Publication Date Aug 19, 2022
Publication Date Aug 19, 2022
Deposit Date Aug 30, 2022
Publicly Available Date Aug 30, 2022
Journal International Journal of Radiation Biology
Print ISSN 0955-3002
Publisher Taylor and Francis
Pages 1-16
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2022.2110317
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2022.2110317
Additional Information Funders : Research Council of Norway (RCN);NIVAs Computational Toxicology Program;Euratom research and training programme 2019–2020
Projects : Center of Excellence (CoE) funding scheme [RCN Project no. 223268];NCTP (www.niva.no/nctp, RCN Project no. 160016);No 900009 (RadoNorm).

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