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      An Assessment of the Model of Concentration Addition for Predicting the Estrogenic Activity of Chemical Mixtures in Wastewater Treatment Works Effluents

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          Abstract

          The effects of simple mixtures of chemicals, with similar mechanisms of action, can be predicted using the concentration addition model (CA). The ability of this model to predict the estrogenic effects of more complex mixtures such as effluent discharges, however, has yet to be established. Effluents from 43 U.K. wastewater treatment works were analyzed for the presence of the principal estrogenic chemical contaminants, estradiol, estrone, ethinylestradiol, and nonylphenol. The measured concentrations were used to predict the estrogenic activity of each effluent, employing the model of CA, based on the relative potencies of the individual chemicals in an in vitro recombinant yeast estrogen screen (rYES) and a short-term (14-day) in vivo rainbow trout vitellogenin induction assay. Based on the measured concentrations of the four chemicals in the effluents and their relative potencies in each assay, the calculated in vitro and in vivo responses compared well and ranged between 3.5 and 87 ng/L of estradiol equivalents (E 2 EQ) for the different effluents. In the rYES, however, the measured E 2 EQ concentrations in the effluents ranged between 0.65 and 43 ng E 2 EQ/L, and they varied against those predicted by the CA model. Deviations in the estimation of the estrogenic potency of the effluents by the CA model, compared with the measured responses in the rYES, are likely to have resulted from inaccuracies associated with the measurement of the chemicals in the extracts derived from the complex effluents. Such deviations could also result as a consequence of interactions between chemicals present in the extracts that disrupted the activation of the estrogen response elements in the rYES. E 2 EQ concentrations derived from the vitellogenic response in fathead minnows exposed to a series of effluent dilutions were highly comparable with the E 2 EQ concentrations derived from assessments of the estrogenic potency of these dilutions in the rYES. Together these data support the use of bioassays for determining the estrogenic potency of WwTW effluents, and they highlight the associated problems for modeling approaches that are reliant on measured concentrations of estrogenic chemicals.

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          Most cited references32

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            Estrogenic activity of surfactants and some of their degradation products assessed using a recombinant yeast screen

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              Estrogenic Effects of Effluents from Sewage Treatment Works

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environ Health Perspect
                Environmental Health Perspectives
                National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
                0091-6765
                April 2006
                21 October 2005
                : 114
                : S-1
                : 90-97
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of BioSciences, The Hatherly Laboratory, Exeter University, Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom
                [2 ] The Environment Agency, National Center for Ecotoxicology and Hazardous Substances, Howbery Park, Wallingford, Oxon, United Kingdom
                [3 ] WRc plc, Blagrove, Swindon, Wiltshire, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to K.L. Thorpe, School of Biosciences, University of Exeter, Prince of Wales Rd., Exeter, EX4 4PS, UK. Telephone: 44 1392 263 752. Fax: 44 1392 263 700. E-mail: k.l.thorpe@ 123456exeter.ac.uk
                Article
                ehp0114s1-000090
                10.1289/ehp.8059
                1874186
                16818252
                d641f82d-9b8f-4111-8e08-75cef73688af
                This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original DOI
                History
                : 31 January 2005
                : 21 October 2005
                Categories
                Monograph

                Public health
                estrogen,concentration addition,effluents,mixtures,estradiol,nonylphenol,estrone,ethinylestradiol

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