Publications by authors named "C Weinhouse"

Human exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) is a significant public health problem that will worsen with a warming climate and increased large-scale wildfires. Here, we characterize an epigenetic memory at the cytochrome P450 1 A (CYP1A) gene in wild Fundulus heteroclitus that have adapted to chronic, extreme PAH pollution. In wild-type fish, CYP1A is highly induced by PAH.

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Article Synopsis
  • People are getting more exposed to harmful chemicals called PAH, especially because of climate change and wildfires.
  • Some fish have adapted to live in waters with high PAH pollution, showing changes in their genes that help protect them from cancer.
  • When those fish are raised in clean water, they can recover some of their protective gene responses, indicating that their adaptations come from environmental influences, not just their DNA.
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Background: Few birth cohorts in South America evaluate the joint effect of minerals and toxic metals on neonatal health. In Madre de Dios, Peru, mercury exposure is prevalent owing to artisanal gold mining, yet its effect on neonatal health is unknown.

Objectives: We aimed to determine whether toxic metals are associated with lower birth weight and shorter gestational age independently of antenatal care and other maternal well-being factors.

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Animal care and use programs commonly use chlorine and chlorine-based disinfectants to help prevent facility acquired infections in animals. The Department of Comparative Medicine (DCM) at Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) follows the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) disinfection guidelines for preparing and storing these disinfectants. DCM prepares bottles of dilute solutions of sodium hypochlorite (that is, commercial bleach) daily.

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Total mercury content (THg) in hair is an accepted biomarker for chronic dietary methylmercury (MeHg) exposure. In artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) communities, the validity of this biomarker is questioned because of the potential for contamination from inorganic mercury. As mining communities may have both inorganic and organic mercury exposures, the efficacy of the hair-THg biomarker needs to be evaluated, particularly as nations begin population exposure assessments under their commitments to the Minamata Convention.

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