Mode of action based risk assessment of the botanical food-borne alkenylbenzene apiol from parsley using physiologically based kinetic (PBK) modelling and read-across from safrole
The present study developed physiologically-based kinetic (PBK) models for the alkenylbenzene apiol in order to facilitate risk assessment based on read-across from the related alkenylbenzene safrole. Model predictions indicate that in rat liver the formation of the 1'-sulfoxy metabolite is about 3 times lower for apiol than for safrole. These data support that the lower confidence limit of the benchmark dose resulting in a 10% extra cancer incidence (BMDL10) that would be obtained in a rodent carcinogenicity study with apiol may be 3-fold higher for apiol than for safrole. These results enable a preliminary risk assessment for apiol, for which tumor data are not available, using a BMDL10 value of 3 times the BMDL10 for safrole. Based on an estimated BMDL10 for apiol of 5.7-15.3 mg/kg body wt per day and an estimated daily intake of 4 × 10-5 mg/kg body wt per day, the margin of exposure (MOE) would amount to 140,000-385,000. This indicates a low priority for risk management. The present study shows how PBK modelling can contribute to the development of alternatives for animal testing, facilitating read-across from compounds for which in vivo toxicity studies on tumor formation are available to compounds for which these data are unavailable.
Main Authors: | Alajlouni, A.M., Al-Malahmeh, A.J., Kiwamoto, Reiko, Wesseling, Sebastiaan, Soffers, A.E.M.F., Al-Subeihi, A.A.A., Vervoort, Jacques, Rietjens, I.M.C.M. |
---|---|
Format: | Article/Letter to editor biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | Apiol, Margin of exposure, PBK modelling, Read-across, Risk assessment, Safrole, |
Online Access: | https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/mode-of-action-based-risk-assessment-of-the-botanical-food-borne- |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Physiologically based kinetic modeling of the bioactivation of myristicin
by: Al-Malahmeh, Amer J., et al. -
A computational study on the biotransformation of alkenylbenzenes by a selection of CYPs : Reflections on their possible bioactivation
by: Pedroni, Lorenzo, et al. -
Role of toxicokinetics and alternative testing strategies in pyrrolizidine alkaloid toxicity and risk assessment; state-of-the-art and future perspectives
by: Ning, Jia, et al. -
PBK models to predict internal and external dose levels following oral exposure of rats to imidacloprid and carbendazim
by: Hu, Bohan, et al. -
Development of a Generic Physiologically Based Kinetic Model for the Prediction of Internal Exposure to Organophosphate Pesticides
by: Moerenhout, Thijs M.J.A., et al.