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SOT is pleased to showcase the five newly elected members of the Awards Committee: Patrick Allard, PhD; Brittany L. Baisch, PhD, DABT; Suzanne E. Fenton, PhD; Erin P. Hines, PhD, DABT; and Jacqueline Kinyamu-Akunda, DVM, PhD. The Awards Committee is charged with reviewing all suggestions and recommendations regarding the awards it has been designated by Council to confer and with selecting the recipient or recipients for each award. Patrick Allard Dr. Allard is a recognized scholar, based at University of California Los Angeles, whose work resides at the intersection of toxicology, genetics, and epigenetics. This has been made possible ...
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Many of the webinars hosted by SOT Regional Chapters, Special Interest Groups, and Specialty Sections—collectively known as the SOT Component Groups—are recorded and added to the SOT Video Library so that SOT members and others can watch these valuable presentations at any time. SOT Committees, the Postdoctoral Assembly, and Graduate Student Leadership Committee also host webinars that are recorded. In this blog, you will find a listing of all the recent webinar recordings that have been added to the SOT Video Library . Advancing the Science of PFAS Mixtures Assessment Watch Webinar Hosted by: SOT Risk Assessment and Mixtures Specialty Sections ...
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The microbiome, often considered to be “the second genome,” has become increasingly recognized as relevant to human health over recent years. The microbiome is composed of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses. In the gastrointestinal tract, it contributes over 200-thousand unique genomes linked to 171 million proteins, totaling to a microbial cell count of approximately 10^13. Each person is estimated to house several hundred microbial species. Given the complexity of the microbiome, there is much that has yet to be discovered, and uncertainty remains regarding some of its functions that are already known. An example of one such uncertainty is whether the ...
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In the vast world of molecular biology, there is a class of genetic players known as long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs). These molecules, typically spanning over 200 nucleotides in length, make up a huge part of our genome and differ from our traditional genes—they don’t make proteins. Despite this, they have emerged as pivotal regulators in various biological processes, influencing gene expression through diverse mechanisms (i.e., chromatin remodeling, transcriptional and translational regulation, RNA and protein stability modulation, RNA alternative splicing, and protein localization). Recently, scientists have been intrigued by how these lncRNAs may be involved ...
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The world’s population of ages 60 and older is projected to nearly double by the year 2050. This, along with the statistic that seven million people in the US live with dementia, is alarming. The Symposium Session “The State of the Science Linking Environmental Chemicals to Age-Related Neurocognitive Disease” opened with a crash course on air pollution and the complexity of particulate matter as a mixture. With particulate matter, the size of the particles is directly linked to their potential for causing health problems. The mechanism of effect, however, is unknown. The first speaker, Allison Kupsco from Columbia University, introduced extracellular RNA (exRNA) ...
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Even though the 2024 Annual Meeting and ToxExpo is barely in the rearview, it’s time to look ahead and begin preparing proposals for Scientific Sessions or Continuing Education courses for the 2025 Annual Meeting and ToxExpo , as the Proposal Submission Site is officially open! To help your preparation, review the preparation and submission instructions on the 2025 Annual Meeting website and plan on attending the webinar “ Developing Competitive Scientific Session Proposals: The Importance of Endorsers ” at 1:00 pm (US EDT, UTC -4) on Thursday, April 11. This webinar is hosted by the SOT Scientific Program Committee and is designed to ...
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I am pleased to announce that SOT recently entered two new Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs) to strengthen our ties with toxicologists worldwide. During the SOT Annual Meeting and ToxExpo in Salt Lake City, SOT leadership met with representatives from the Korean Society of Toxicology (KSOT) and co-signed an MOU stating: “At present this agreement is made as a gesture of goodwill between the two societies, which may lead to: Mutual participation in annual meetings Recommendation of invited speakers for joint symposium in annual meetings International collaboration to increase the impact of toxicological science” This formal acknowledgement ...
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Darryl B. Hood, PhD, has been elected by the SOT voting members as an SOT Councilor. Dr. Hood’s passion regarding the importance of teaching, mentoring graduate students, postdocs, and junior faculty in the academy and toxicological research enterprise continues to be undergirded by the declining statistics documenting that less than 0.21% of persons holding PhD degrees in the sciences are from individuals that look like him. During the 32 years of his training at both an underrepresented minority academic health science center and research-intensive R01 institutions, he has grown to have a strong affinity for both learning environments. Making the transition ...
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Agnes L. Karmaus, PhD, has been elected by the SOT voting members as an SOT Councilor. Passionate about toxicology, Dr. Karmaus has grown into her career through engagement with SOT. Dr. Karmaus is currently a Senior Computational Toxicologist and Human Safety Project Expert at Syngenta Crop Protection LLC, specializing in the integration of in vitro and computational toxicology in risk assessment context. Her expertise lies in high-throughput screening and predictive toxicology, and her work focuses on developing, evaluating the performance, and integrating alternative approaches to animal testing. Dr. Karmaus has a diverse research background. Having ...
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Ashley Schwartz with the statue of Rachel Carson in Woods Hole, Massachusetts The SOT Committee on Diversity Initiatives encourages undergraduate students and SOT Student members who are members of groups underrepresented in the sciences to apply for the SOT Diversity Initiatives Career Development Award . The SOT Diversity Initiatives Career Development Award enables undergraduate and graduate students to engage in additional education and career development opportunities to enhance their personal development. The SOT Diversity Initiatives Endowment Fund supports this award, which is administered by the SOT Committee on Diversity Initiatives. ...
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Byline: Wilson Rumbeiha and La Cole Blackshire Our recruitment for mentors and mentees for 2024–2025 is entering its peak, and we are taking this opportunity to remind potential mentees and mentors to send in your applications. The goal of the Toxicology Mentoring and Skills Development Training (ToxMSDT) program is to mentor underrepresented undergraduate students in STEM fields and increase their chances of success in entering toxicology graduate training programs. Ultimately, this will diversify the toxicology workforce. Applications for mentees for the 2024–2025 cohort are due April 26, 2024 . Potential applicants interested in getting ...
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The April 2024 issue of Toxicological Sciences includes a Contemporary Review that discusses surgical smoke and its components, effects, and mitigation. It also features an In-Depth Review about the emerging role of hypoxia and environmental factors in inflammatory bowel disease, while a Forum article argues that evidence evaluated by EFSA does not support lowering the tolerable daily intake of bisphenol A. Additionally, #ToxSpotlight articles describe how obesogenic polystyrene microplastic exposures disrupt the gut-liver-adipose axis and review cardiotoxicity assessments of bisphenol chemicals and estradiol using human-induced pluripotent stem cell–derived ...
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2024 Undergraduate Diversity Program cohort The SOT Undergraduate Diversity Program (UDP), planned by the SOT Committee on Diversity Initiatives (CDI), hosted 30 undergraduate students and five faculty advisors during the SOT 63rd Annual Meeting and ToxExpo in Salt Lake City, Utah. This three-day program aims to introduce the principles of toxicology, demonstrate how toxicology influences the world around us, and showcase the research careers available within the field. This was the 35th year of the UDP, and the enduring success of the program is a direct result of the hard work of many dedicated volunteers across the years. In this blog, I, on behalf ...
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Each month, SOT provides an update on activities and events of importance to the toxicology community through the release of the “Around the World of Toxicology” blog. To submit an event, opportunity, or information for consideration for inclusion in the monthly “Around the World of Toxicology” blog, complete the special submission form for “Around the World of Toxicology” items . Please note that only activities by societies and professional associations (i.e., nonprofits) will be considered. If you are an organization or company seeking to promote an event, please submit your activity to the SOT “ Calendar of Events .” Reminders of Upcoming, Previously ...
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From our soaps and cleaning products to our plastic food packaging and our electronic devices, all our daily-use consumer products are mixtures of natural and synthetic chemicals. As toxicology research and chemical rick assessment introduce new knowledge on the safety of these chemicals, there are arising concerns regarding their use in consumer product formulations. We’re beginning to see certain phthalates, phenols, and perfluoro-alkyl substances removed from product formulations and replaced by emerging alternative chemicals. A classic example is how the plastics chemical bisphenol A, known widely as BPA, has been phased out and replaced by structurally similar ...
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It was Tuesday afternoon in Salt Lake City. The expansive room of the Salt Palace Convention Center buzzed with conversations between colleagues new and old as attendees poured in by the dozens to hear the 2024 Merit Award Lecture given by David Eaton, PhD, ATS, DABT, Professor Emeritus at University of Washington and this year’s recipient of the SOT Merit Award. Attendees settled into their seats as SOT President Dori Germolec, PhD, took the stage to introduce Dr. Eaton. She outlined the goal of the Merit Award, which is to recognize an individual’s contributions to toxicology throughout an entire career. Dr. Eaton’s storied career includes ...
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Paternal exposures had their moment to shine during the 2024 Symposium Session “It Takes Two! Paternal Exposures and Their Impacts on Offspring Health.” As someone who has studied reproductive and developmental toxicity primarily through the mother, it was great to be reminded that it is not just the maternal exposure that matters when it comes to offspring health—even in the case of environmental exposures! During this session, a diverse array of speakers provided their perspectives on how paternal exposures (like to cannabis or wildfire smoke) can later affect offspring. Mechanisms for how paternal exposure can affect offspring center on epigenetic ...
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Did you miss 2024 SOT TV in Salt Lake City? Don’t worry! You can view the captivating interviews and features anytime through the SOT TV 2024 playlist on YouTube . SOT TV offers a rich blend of interviews with Annual Meeting speakers, explorations of SOT programs, and insightful profiles of organizations driving toxicology forward. You have two ways to immerse yourself in SOT TV content: watch the curated episodes or explore individual segments. Major Themes Explored This year SOT TV explored three different themes relating to toxicology for each episode. Episode 1: The Next Frontier of Toxicology —Focuses on all the amazing innovation that ...
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James P. Luyendyk, PhD, was chosen by the SOT voting members to serve as the 2024–2025 SOT Vice President–Elect. Dr. Luyendyk is the Albert and Lois Dehn Endowed Chair and Professor in Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation and member of the Institute for Integrative Toxicology at Michigan State University. Dr. Luyendyk has 15 years of uninterrupted support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for his research focused on mechanisms linking components of the hemostatic system with hepatotoxicity and liver repair/regeneration. He is a prior recipient of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Outstanding New Environmental ...
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Rebecca C. Fry, PhD, was chosen by the SOT voting members to serve as the 2024–2025 SOT Treasurer-Elect. Dr. Fry is the Carol Remmer Angle Distinguished Professor at the Gillings School of Global Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill). She is the Acting Chair of the Department of Environmental Science and Engineering. She is also the Director of UNC-Chapel Hill’s National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)–funded Superfund Research Program and the Founding Director of the Institute for Environmental Health Solutions at UNC-Chapel Hill. Dr. Fry’s laboratory focuses on understanding ...
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