4.7 Article

The Parental Pesticide and Offspring's Epigenome Study: Towards an Integrated Use of Human Biomonitoring of Exposure and Effect Biomarkers

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics9120332

Keywords

biomonitoring; pesticides; epigenetic biomarkers; oxidative stress; Morocco

Funding

  1. Moulay Ismail University - VLIR-UOS (Phase I: 2017-2021) [MA2017IUC038A104]
  2. Research and Development Project SEBIO (Morocco, 2017-2021) - ARES-CCD of the Belgian Cooperation for Development

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In Morocco, the issue of pesticides is being addressed through the PaPOE study, which aims to investigate the effects of pesticides on offspring genes and assess occupational exposures among farmworkers. The study also includes a birth cohort of pregnant women to establish a biomonitoring system, with an ongoing enrollment of participants.
In Morocco, due to the lack of education and the presence of a counterfeit market, pesticides constitute a major problem to be addressed by occupational and environmental health agencies. This paper aims to introduce the PaPOE (Parental Pesticides and Offspring Epigenome) prospective study and its goals, to motivate the study rationale and design, and to examine comprehensively whether multi-residue exposure to commonly used pesticides could induce epigenetic alterations through the oxidative stress pathway. The PaPOE project includes a cross-sectional study assessing the occupational exposure among 300 farmworkers in Meknes, and initiates a birth cohort of 1000 pregnant women. Data and biological samples are collected among farmworkers, and throughout pregnancy, and at birth. Oxidative stress biomarkers include Glutathione, Malondialdehyde, and 8-OHdG. Global and gene-specific DNA methylation is assessed. The study began enrollment in 2019 and is ongoing. As of 30 June 2021, 300 farmworkers and 125 pregnant women have enrolled. The results are expected to showcase the importance of biomonitoring for understanding individual risks, and to identify a number of regions where DNA methylation status is altered in the pesticides-exposed population, paving the way for an integrated biomonitoring system in Morocco and Africa to assess environmental exposures and their long-term health consequences.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available