Adapting concepts from systems biology to develop systems exposure event networks for exposure science research

Systems exposure science has emerged from the traditional environmental exposure assessment framework and incorporates new concepts that link sources of human exposure to internal dose and metabolic processes. Because many human environmental studies are designed for retrospective exposure evaluatio...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biomarkers Vol. 16; no. 2; pp. 99 - 105
Main Authors: Pleil, Joachim D., Sheldon, Linda S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Informa Healthcare 01-03-2011
Taylor & Francis
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Summary:Systems exposure science has emerged from the traditional environmental exposure assessment framework and incorporates new concepts that link sources of human exposure to internal dose and metabolic processes. Because many human environmental studies are designed for retrospective exposure evaluations they often do not provide practical toxicological outcome parameters. Our goal was to examine concepts from systems biology research and adapt them to a network approach that maps forward to a perturbation event using two hypothetical examples. The article proposes that environmental exposure studies should not only retrospectively document exposure levels, but also measure biological parameters that can be used to inform relevant systemic changes.
ISSN:1354-750X
1366-5804
DOI:10.3109/1354750X.2010.541565