4.8 Review

Metabolic transformation of environmentally-relevant brominated flame retardants in Fauna: A review

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 161, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107097

Keywords

Brominated flame retardants; Emerging BFRs; Polybrominated diphenyl ethers; Metabolism; Biotransformation; Non-human animals

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. ECCC's Chemicals Management Plan

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In the flame retardant industry, there has been a trend of using more highly brominated compounds as replacements for banned and regulated compounds. However, there is a lack of knowledge regarding the metabolism and transformation potential of these new compounds. Current research shows variations in experimental protocols and a lack of information on the fate and metabolic pathways of certain environmentally relevant flame retardants. More studies are needed to understand the bioaccumulation and fate of these compounds in exposed organisms.
Over the past few decades, production trends of the flame retardant (FR) industry, and specifically for brominated FRs (BFRs), is for the replacement of banned and regulated compounds with more highly brominated, higher molecular weight compounds including oligomeric and polymeric compounds. Chemical, biological, and environmental stability of BFRs has received some attention over the years but knowledge is currently lacking in the transformation potential and metabolism of replacement emerging or novel BFRs (E/NBFRs). For articles published since 2015, a systematic search strategy reviewed the existing literature on the direct (e.g., in vitro or in vivo) non-human BFR metabolism in fauna (animals). Of the 51 papers reviewed, and of the 75 known environmental BFRs, PBDEs were by far the most widely studied, followed by HBCDDs and TBBPA. Experimental protocols between studies showed large disparities in exposure or incubation times, age, sex, depuration periods, and of the absence of active controls used in in vitro experiments. Species selection emphasized non-standard test animals and/or field-collected animals making comparisons difficult. For in vitro studies, confounding variables were generally not taken into consideration (e.g., season and time of day of collection, pollution point-sources or human settlements). As of 2021 there remains essentially no information on the fate and metabolic pathways or kinetics for 30 of the 75 environmentally relevant E/BFRs. Regardless, there are clear species-specific and BFRspecific differences in metabolism and metabolite formation (e.g. BDE congeners and HBCDD isomers). Future in vitro and in vivo metabolism/biotransformation research on E/NBFRs is required to better understand their bioaccumulation and fate in exposed organisms. Also, studies should be conducted on well characterized lab (e. g., laboratory rodents, zebrafish) and commonly collected wildlife species used as captive models (crucian carp, Japanese quail, zebra finches and polar bears).

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