Unit 1
Unit 1
1.0 INTRODUCTION
We are exposed to different substances in our everyday life and some of these
may be toxic to our health. The quality of our environment is also decreasing
and people are exposed to a variety of pollutants. These pollutants can have
acute, chronic, sub-acute and toxic effects on the living organisms as well as
human beings. Substances that we use in daily life starting from paints, detergents,
cleaning solutions, cosmetics etc. can have hazardous chemicals which can have
toxic effects on our health. Rachel Carson is considered the mother of
environmental toxicology. She published the book Silent Spring in 1962 which
discussed the toxic effects of the pesticide DDT. Living organisms can be exposed
to toxic substances at any stage of their life cycle. They can be accumulated in
the fatty tissues and lead to bioaccumulation. This can lead to biomagnifications
of specific toxicants. In this unit let us learn about toxins, toxicants, their types,
sources and the mechanisms of their action.
1.1 OBJECTIVE
After reading this unit, you should be able to:
define toxins and toxicants;
understand the different concepts and terminologies used in environmental
toxicology;
explain the different sources of toxicants;
describe the routes of exposure to toxicants;
understand the mechanisms and site of toxic action by toxicants; and
explain how toxins are stored in the various tissues of the human body.
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Introduction to Toxicology
1.2 DEFINITIONS AND CONCEPTS
1.2.1 Definitions
Let us now learn about some definitions and terms commonly used in
environmental toxicology.
a) Environmental toxicology: It is a branch of science that deals with the
harmful effects of different physical, chemical and biological agents on
living organisms. It is multidisciplinary in nature.
b) Ecotoxicology: This is a sub-discipline of environmental toxicology. This
deals with the harmful effects of toxicants at ecosystem and population
levels.
c) Toxicant: Any toxic material or substance is termed as a toxicant. They are
hazardous and poisonous. Toxicants are generally man-made and artificial
products introduced into the environment due to human activity. They
include bisphenol, insecticides and a number of industrial chemicals.
d) Toxins: These are produced naturally by living organisms. For example,
toxins from the mushroom plant and toxin from the venom of snake are
natural toxins.
e) Poisons: They are toxicants that cause death or illness in very small doses.
f) Toxicologists are scientists who deal with the study of toxicants and toxins.
g) Xenobiotic is referred to a foreign substance entering the body. It is derived
from the Greek word ‘xeno’ meaning ‘foreigner’.
h) Toxicosis/ Poisoning/ Intoxication: Any disease produced by a toxicant.
i) Tolerance: The ability of an organism to show less response to a specific
dose of a chemical than it demonstrated on a previous exposure; refers to
acquired and not innate resistance.
j) LD 50: The dose that is lethal to 50% of a test sample or population.
Expression of toxicant concentrations is in ppb or ppm in feedstuff, water,
air, tissue etc. Other expressions of dose are maximum nontoxic dose,
maximum tolerated dose, approximate lethal dose.
Let us now learn about some important man-made sources of toxicants in detail.
They include the following.
1) Air pollutants: Humans have been polluting the air and there are also
significant natural pollutants such as terpenes from plants, smoke from
forest fires, and fumes and smoke from volcanoes. Among air pollutants
there are gaseous pollutants like carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide,
hydrocarbons, hydrogen sulfide, nitrogen oxides, ozone and other oxidants,
sulfur oxides. There are also fine particulates in the air. The particulates
include dust (coal, ash, sawdust, cement), fumes <1 ìm in diameter that
come from chemical processes, mist droplets, smoke (0.05–1.0 ìm) resulting
from incomplete combustion of fossil fuels and aerosols.
3) Water pollutants: Surface waters may be polluted from point and nonpoint
sources. Industrial effluents discharged into waters are an example of point
source. Fertilizer and pesticide application in agricultural fields that enter
surface waters through rainfall are an example on nonpoint source of
pollution. Industrial wastes discharged into waters contain organic and
inorganic wastes including hazardous chemicals. Toxic effects are seen in
humans when they consume this contaminated water.
4) Soil pollutants: When wastes are not properly disposed off then soil also
gets polluted. Soil contaminants include: domestic waste, solid wastes,
electronic wastes, municipal wastes, agricultural wastes that contain a
number of chemicals harmful to life. Further agricultural toxicants like
persistent pesticides that do not biodegrade remain in the soil of many years
and move into the food chain causing greater health impacts. The most
toxic hazardous pesticides are the organochlorine compounds such as DDT,
aldrin, dieldrin, and chlordane.
5) Heavy metals: Metals released from industrial activities cause toxicity. For
example, the heavy metals lead and arsenic are highly toxic and is found in
potable water in certain areas. Lead can enter water from lead pipes, lead
solder, lead toys, leaded gasoline, utensils and also paints containing lead.
Lead is used in cosmetics like lipsticks can regular usage can enter the
system and cause health effects. Lead induces neurological damage and
can penetrate the placental barrier and induce birth defects among children.
Arsenic toxicity is also a serious cause of concern especially in West Bengal
in India. It can leach into water from pesticide sprays, arsenic-containing
fossil fuels, and leaching of mine tailings and smelter runoff. Chronic high-
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level exposures can cause abnormal skin pigmentation, hyperkeratosis, nasal Introduction to Toxicants
congestion, abdominal pain and cancers. Cadmium enters the food chain
through industrial activities. It can accumulate in the tissues of aquatic
organisms. Cadmium contaminated rice in Japan caused the disease Itai-
Itai. The disease was characterized by severe kidney damage, painful bone
and joint problems. Mercury from industries manufacturing plastics, vinyl
chloride is also highly toxic to living beings. The Minamata disease in
Japan occurred due to consumption of mercury contaminated fishes resulted
in neurological disorders, paralysis, and mental disorientation.
7) Petroleum and oil pollutants: Shore animals, such as crabs, shrimp, mussels,
and barnacles, are also affected by the toxic hydrocarbons (oil and petroleum
compounds) ingested by them.
10) Solvents: Many types of solvents are used which have systemic toxic effects
on nervous system and the blood. Benzene is used in the rubber, canning,
printing, shoe manufacturing industries. Benzene affects the hematopoietic
tissue in the bone marrow and is an immunosuppressant. Benzene exposure
results in decrease of white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets.
Continued exposure causes severe bone marrow damage, aplastic anemia
and leukemia. Other toxic solvents include: aliphatic hydrocarbons,
halogenated aliphatic hydrocarbons, aliphatic alcohols, glycols, glycol ethers
and aromatic hydrocarbons.
11) Asbestos: This material is used in insulation, roofing for houses, asbestos
cements, brake linings, electrical appliances and coating materials. The
inhalation of asbestos causes ‘Asbestosis’, a respiratory disease characterized 9
Introduction to Toxicology by scarring of lungs, fibrosis, calcification, and also leads to lung cancer.
12) Therapeutic drugs: Generally all therapeutic drugs are toxic and produce
hazardous effects at some dose. This depends on many factors like: dose,
nature of the drug, individual (genetic) variation, diet, age, etc. The side
effect of chloroquinol, an antidiarrhea drug used in Japan in 1960 caused
stiffness of the joints accompanied by damage to the optic nerve. Birth
defects or teratogenesis can be caused by drugs particularly, thalidomide.
Dermatitis is a common side effect of topically applied corticosteroids.
Toxic effects on the blood are caused by chlorpromazine. Hemolytic anemia
is caused by methyldopa and megaloblastic anemia is induced by
methotrexate. Eye toxicity and glaucoma is caused by thioridazine and
systemic corticosteroids. There are many more drugs that cause toxicity to
organs.
14) Biological toxicants: Some naturally occurring substances that cause toxicity
include plant, animal, algal, fungal and microbial toxins. They include many
phytotoxins and mycotoxins. It is pertinent to understand that a toxin is a
toxicant produced by a living organism and is not used as a synonym for
toxicant. All toxins are toxicants, but all toxicants are not considered as
toxins. Toxins are the metabolic products used for defense against pathogens.
These natural products are used in beneficial pharmaceutical purposes and
also in biological warfare. For example, Aflatoxins are products of
Aspergillus flavus. It is fungus that contaminates grain, maize, peanuts,
and so on. Aflatoxin B1 is the most toxic and is reported to have carcinogenic
effects.
These were some of the sources of toxicants that have harmful effects on human
health. Now let us see the mode of action of some toxicants.
Check Your Progress 1
Note: a) Write your answer in about 50 words.
b) Check your progress with possible answers given at the end of the
10 unit.
Introduction to Toxicants
1) Describe the various sources of toxicants.
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2) Write short notes on (a) therapeutic drugs and (b) drugs of abuse as toxicants.
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b) Subcellular Organelles: Toxic metals have the ability to disrupt the structure
and function of a number of subcellular organelles. The enzymes associated
with the endoplasmic reticulum may be inhibited and metals can be
accumulated in the lysosomes. Also respiratory enzymes in the mitochondria
can be inhibited and metal inclusion bodies are produced in the nucleus.
d) Kidney: It is the main excretory organ of the body and a common target
organ for metal toxicity. Cadmium and mercury are potent nephrotoxicants.
e) Nervous System: The nervous system is also a common target of toxic organic
metal compounds. For example, methylmercury is lipid soluble. It can readily
go across the blood-brain barrier and enter the nervous system. Also organic
lead compounds are mainly neurotoxicants.
b) Lung: The respiratory system includes nose, mouth, pharynx, trachea, and
bronchus which can reduce the toxicity of airborne particulate substances.
There is little or no absorption in these structures. But the cells lining the
respiratory tract absorb agents that can cause toxicological effects. The
absorption site is the alveoli-capillary membrane that is very thin (0.4–1.5
ìm). It allows for rapid exchange of gases/vapors. The ‘residual volume’ is
the amount of air retained in the lung despite maximum expiratory effort.
Hence toxicants may not be cleared out immediately due to the slow release
from the residual volume. The rate of entry of some vapor-phase toxicants
is controlled by the alveolar ventilation rate. The site of deposition of particles
in the respiratory tract is dependent on several factors. They include:
aerodynamic behavior of the particles, particle size, density, shape,
hygroscopicity, breathing pattern, and lung airway structure. The particle
sizes less than 10 - 20 ìm which get through the nasopharyngeal regions and
reach the alveoli are medically significant.
a) Plasma: In humans the plasma protein binding can vary between and within
chemical classes. It is also species specific. The systems of human beings
bind acidic drugs more extensively than any other species. Further there
are also other variables that can alter plasma protein concentrations.
Pregnancy, malnutrition, carcinogenesis, liver abscess, kidney disease, and
age can reduce serum albumin. The á1-glycoprotein concentrations can
increase with age, inflammation, infections, obesity, kidney failure and
stress. These characteristics bring about changes in the body temperature,
in the acid-base balance and alter chemical protein-binding characteristics.
b) Liver and Kidney: Both these organs have a high affinity for toxic substances
and store more toxicants than any other tissue in the whole body. Lipophilic
substances like organochlorine pesticides and organic solvents like
trichloroethane, methyl chloroform, are readily absorbed in the liver. They
can remain in the liver for long periods if they are not biotransformed into
water-soluble substances. The liver is a major storage site for water-insoluble
toxic heavy metals. Some toxicants can be stored in the liver also. For
example, the antimalaria drug quinacrine accumulates in the liver as result
of reversible intracellular binding. The concentration in the liver can be
several thousand times than that of plasma. In the kidney certain large
molecules such as proteins do not easily pass through the walls of Bowman’s
capsule. Further, unbound metals like cadmium and mercury can be
reabsorbed in the cells of the proximal convoluted tubule. Inside the cell
they bind to metallothionein resulting in concentration of the toxicants in
the kidneys. The kidneys store ten times the amount of cadmium found in
the liver, and it can be stored for 10 years or more. Finally bioaccumulation
in the kidneys cause complete renal failure.
e) Bone: Toxicants can be stored in the bone and it can become a reservoir
which allows the slow release of chemicals such as lead. Calcium is an
important component of bone. Lead can easily replace calcium and is stored
in the bones. The effects can be acute or chronic depending on how the
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toxicant is suddenly released or mobilized from these depots. Also perfusion Introduction to Toxicants
of tissues is an important factor for toxicant storage and distribution. The
organs like heart, kidney, liver and brain are well perfused than fat and
bone. In the fat and bone slow elimination of toxicants occurs. Bone can
store toxicants for 10 to 20 years. The toxicants stored in the bone may not
be toxic to the bone. It becomes toxic when it is released slowly resulting
in nerve damage and so on.
f) Blood: The circulatory system and components in the blood stream are
primarily responsible for the transport of toxicants to the target tissues or
reservoirs. Erythrocytes and lymph also transport the toxicants. Absorption
also depends on physiological factors and physicochemical properties of
the drug. Hence a reversible movement of toxicants occurs between blood
and tissues. Most toxicants pass by simple diffusion down a concentration
gradient from the blood to tissues. Tissue mass, blood flow, molecular
weight, lipid solubility are also important factors for toxicant distribution.
Water soluble toxins are stored here. Also heavy metals like arsenic, thallium,
cadmium and chlorinated pesticides, bisphenyl A targets the blood. The
toxic substances upon entering the bloodstream bind with plasma proteins
such as albumin, transferrin, globulin, and lipoproteins. Most toxic
substances are known to bind with the plasma protein albumin.
Toxic substances are absorbed and distributed in our body. They are also
eliminated, biotransformed and detoxified by the liver and kidneys. Further details
will be discussed in the following units.
Check Your Progress 2
Note: a) Write your answer in about 50 words.
b) Check your progress with possible answers given at the end of the
unit.
1) Describe the various routes of exposure to toxicants.
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Introduction to Toxicology 2) Where are toxic substances stored in the human body?
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Introduction to Toxicants
1.9 REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED FURTHER
READINGS
Abel, P. D., ed. Water Pollution Biology. London: Taylor and Francis, 1996.
Costa, D. L. Air pollution. In Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology: The Basic Science
of Poisons, 6th ed., C. D. Klaassen, ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001,
pp. 979–1012.
Doull, J. Recommended limits for occupational exposure to chemicals. In Casarett
and Doull’s Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons, 6th ed., C. D.
Klaassen, ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001, pp. 1155–1176.
Hodgson, E., and R. C. Smart, eds. Introduction to Biochemical Toxicology, 3rd
ed. New York: Wiley, 2001. Hodgson, E., R. B. Mailman, and J. E.
Chambers, eds. Dictionary of Toxicology, 2nd ed. London: Macmillan,
1998. Klaassen, C. D. ed. Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology: The Basic
Science of Poisons, 6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001. Timbrell, J.
A. Principles of Biochemical Toxicology, 3rd ed. London: Taylor and
Francis, 2000. Wexler, P. Information Resources in Toxicology, 3rd ed.
San Diego: Academic Press, 2000.
Hoffman, D. J., B. A. Rattner, G. A. Burton, and J. Cairns, eds. Handbook of
Ecotoxicology, 2nd ed. Boca Raton: Lewis, 2002.
Holgate, S. T., J. M. Samet, H. Koren, and R. Maynard, eds. Air Pollution and
Health. San Diego: Academic Press, 1999.
Larson, S. J., P. D. Capel, and M. S. Majewski, eds. Pesticides in Surface Waters.
Chelsea, MI: Ann Arbor Press, 1998.
Thorne, P. S. Occupational toxicology. In Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology: The
Basic Science of Poisons, 6th ed., C. D. Klaassen, ed. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2001, pp. 1123–1140.
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2) Your answer should include the following points: Introduction to Toxicants
The quantity of toxicant that reaches the target tissue like bone, fat and
so on is dependent upon the amount of toxicant absorbed, the distribution
in the body, the metabolism and the rate of excretion of the toxic
substance. The cell membrane is selectively permeable allowing the
passage of some substances depending on the molecular weight of the
substance, lipid solubility and so on.
Plasma
Liver and Kidney
Lung
Fat tissue
Bone
Blood
Passage of toxicants across placenta
Blood-brain barrier (BBB)
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