Active ingredients in plant protection products are subject to rigorous safety assessment during their development, including assessment of genotoxicity. Plant protection products are used for agriculture in multiple regions and for the registration of active ingredients it is necessary to satisfy the data requirements of these different regions. There are no overarching global agreements on which genotoxicity studies need to be conducted to satisfy the majority of regulatory authorities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes the further development of a read-across approach applicable to the toxicological assessment of structurally-related xenobiotic metabolites. The approach, which can be applied in the absence of definitive identification of all the individual metabolites, draws on the use of chemical descriptors and multi-variate statistical analysis to define a composite "chemical space" and to classify and characterize closely-related subgroups within this. In this example, consideration of the descriptors driving grouping, combined with empirical evidence for lack of significant further biotransformation of metabolites, leads to the conclusion that, in the absence of any specific structural alerts, the relative toxicity of metabolites within a single grouping will be determined by their relative systemic exposure as described by their ADME characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLysimeter studies can be used to identify and quantify soil degradates of agrochemicals (metabolites) that have the potential to leach to groundwater. However, the apparent metabolic profile of such lysimeter leachate samples will often be significantly more complex than would be expected in true groundwater samples. This is particularly true for S-metolachlor, which has an extremely complex metabolic pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtomic force microscopy has been used to image the various facets of two morphologically distinct samples of silicalite. The smaller (20 microm) sample A crystals show 1 nm high radial growth terraces. The larger (240 microm) sample B crystals show growth terraces 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than the terraces on sample A with growth edges parallel to the crystallographic axes.
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