The Influence of Human Interindividual Variability on the Low-Dose Region of Dose-Response Curve Induced by 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-Dioxin in Primary B Cells

The influence of interindividual variability is not typically assessed in traditional toxicological studies. Given that chemical exposures occur in heterogeneous populations, this knowledge gap has the potential to cause undue harm within the realms of public health and industrial and municipal finances. A recent report from the National Research Council (NRC) suggests that when accounting for interindividual variation in responses, traditionally assumed nonlinear dose-response relationships (DRRs) for noncancer-causing endpoints would better be explained with a linear relationship within the low-dose region. To address this knowledge gap and directly test the NRC’s assumption, this study focused on assessing the DRR between 2,3,7,8-tetracholorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) exposure and immune suppression in a cohort of unique human donors. Human B cells were isolated from 51 individual donors and treated with logarithmically increasing concentrations of TCDD (0–30 nM TCDD). Two endpoints sensitive to TCDD were assessed: (1) number of IgM-secreting B cells and (2) quantity of IgM secreted. The results show that TCDD significantly suppressed both the number of IgM-secreting B cells and the quantity of IgM secreted (P < .05). Statistical model comparisons indicate that the low-dose region of the two DRRs is best explained with a nonlinear relationship. Rather than assuming low-dose linearity for all noncancer-causing DRRs, our study suggests the need to consider the sp...
Source: Toxicological Sciences - Category: Toxicology Authors: Tags: Human Variability and Low-Dose Responses of TCDD Source Type: research