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Effects of Environmental Non-Essential Toxic Heavy Metals on Epigenetics During Development

Hisaka Kurita, Kazuki Ohuchi, Masatoshi Inden

2025Toxics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We are exposed to a variety of environmental chemicals in our daily lives. It is possible that the effects of this daily chemical exposure could accumulate in the organism in some form and influence health and disease development. The exposure effects extend throughout the human lifetime, not only after birth, but also during the embryonic period. Epigenetics is an important target for the molecular mechanisms of daily environmental chemical effects. Epigenetics is a mechanism of gene transcription regulation that does not involve changes in DNA sequence. The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) theory has also been proposed, in which effects such as exposure to environmental chemicals during embryonic period are mediated by epigenetic changes, which may lead to risk for disease development and adverse health effects after maturity. This review summarizes the association between embryonic exposure and the epigenetics of well-known non-essential toxic heavy metals (methylmercury, cadmium, arsenic, and lead), a representative group of environmental chemicals. In the future, it will be important to predict the epigenetic mechanisms of unknown chemical and combined exposures. In addition, further experimental investigations using experimental animals and the accumulation of knowledge are needed to study the transgenerational effects of environmental chemicals in the future.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsOrganismBiologyMethylmercury5-HydroxymethylcytosineHormesisDNA methylationEnvironmental toxicologyDiseasePhysiologyToxicologyGeneticsGeneMedicineEcologyOxidative stressGene expressionToxicityInternal medicineBiochemistryBioaccumulationHeavy Metal Exposure and ToxicityBirth, Development, and HealthEpigenetics and DNA Methylation
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