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A review of environmental metabolism disrupting chemicals and effect biomarkers associating disease risks: Where exposomics meets metabolomics

Environment International 2021 175 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jiachen Sun, Mingliang Fang Hua Wang, Yichao Huang, Runcheng Fang, Xiaochen Huang, Daniel Cozzolino, Hua Wang, Yichao Huang, Xiaochen Huang, Yichao Huang, Yichao Huang, Daniel Cozzolino, De‐Xiang Xu, Mingliang Fang Yichao Huang, Mingliang Fang Daniel Cozzolino, Daniel Cozzolino, Jing Yang, Mingliang Fang Daniel Cozzolino, Daniel Cozzolino, Yichao Huang, Xiaochen Huang, Mingliang Fang Jiachen Sun, Xiaochen Huang, Daniel Cozzolino, Mingliang Fang Xiaochen Huang, Hua Wang, Xiaochen Huang, Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Daniel Cozzolino, Yichao Huang, Yichao Huang, Daniel Cozzolino, Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Yichao Huang, Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang Mingliang Fang

Summary

This review examines how environmental chemicals, including contaminants associated with plastics, can disrupt human metabolism and contribute to conditions like obesity and diabetes. Researchers mapped the connections between chemical exposure and changes in metabolic biomarkers that signal disease risk. The study highlights the emerging field of metabolism-disrupting chemicals and the importance of understanding how everyday environmental exposures influence long-term metabolic health.

Body Systems
Models
Study Type Human

Humans are exposed to an ever-increasing number of environmental toxicants, some of which have gradually been elucidated to be important risk factors for metabolic diseases, such as diabetes and obesity. These metabolism-sensitive diseases typically occur when key metabolic and signaling pathways were disrupted, which can be influenced by the exposure to contaminants such as endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), along with genetic and lifestyle factors. This promotes the concept and research on environmental metabolism disrupting chemicals (MDCs). In addition, identifying endogenous biochemical markers of effect linked to disease states is becoming an important tool to screen the biological targets following environmental contaminant exposure, as well as to provide an overview of toxicity risk assessment. As such, the current review aims to contribute to the further understanding of exposome and human health and disease by characterizing environmental exposure and effect metabolic biomarkers. We summarized MDC-associated metabolic biomarkers in laboratory animal and human cohort studies using high throughput targeted and nontargeted metabolomics techniques. Contaminants including heavy metals and organohalogen compounds, especially EDCs, have been repetitively associated with metabolic disorders, whereas emerging contaminants such as perfluoroalkyl substances and microplastics have also been found to disrupt metabolism. In addition, we found major limitations in the effective identification of metabolic biomarkers especially in human studies, toxicological research on the mixed effect of environmental exposure has also been insufficient compared to the research on single chemicals. Thus, it is timely to call for research efforts dedicated to the study of combined effect and metabolic alterations for the better assessment of exposomic toxicology and health risks. Moreover, advanced computational and prediction tools, further validation of metabolic biomarkers, as well as systematic and integrative investigations are also needed in order to reliably identify novel biomarkers and elucidate toxicity mechanisms, and to further utilize exposome and metabolome profiling in public health and safety management.

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