4%	United States
Environmental Protection
kl M % Agency
CSS Highlights	1
Adverse Outcome Pathway Wiki Open to the Public!	1
A Successful EPA Chemical Safety Data Summit Held In Research Triangle Park, NC	2
Research Study of PFCs in Bald Eagle Nestlings in the Upper Midwestern United States	3
Paper Reviews the Use of ToxCast Program Approaches for Chemical Safety Risk Assessments	4
Publication on Risks of Pharmaceuticals to Wildlife and Ecosystems Just Released	5
National Research Council Releases Framework to Guide Selection of Chemical Alternatives:	6
EPA Honors Winners of the 19th Annual Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Awards	7
Upcoming & Recent Events	8
EPA's Computational Toxicology Communities of Practice (CoP) Webinar	8
3rd Annual American Society for Cellular and Computational Toxicology Meeting	9
EPA Research at Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry Meeting	10
Grantees Corner	11
EPA Awards STAR Grants for new methods for Exposure Science in the 21st Century Project	11
EPA Funding Research on Susceptibility and Variability in Human Response to Chemical Exposure	12
Employment Opportunities	13
Post-Doctoral Research Program	13
CSS in the News	14
Recent News Articles	14
Subscribe to CSS Pathways	14

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CSS Highlights
Adverse Outcome Pathway Wiki Open to the Public!
On September 25th, through a collaboration with the international scientific community, the European Joint
Research Center, the US Army Corp of Engineers and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (QECD), EPA publicly released the online Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) Wiki—an interactive,
virtual encyclopedia for global AOP development and evaluation. An AOP is a conceptual framework that
shows existing knowledge concerning the linkage between a chemical interacting with a biological process, a
direct molecular initiating event, and an adverse human or environmental health risk. The wiki is the first
publicly released module of the larger AOP Knowledgebase (AOP KB). This close international collaboration
has resulted in the beginnings of a knowledgebase that will consolidate comprehensive knowledge on how
chemicals can induce adverse effects. EPA's Adverse Outcome Pathway project team is hosting regular
webinars to strengthen CSS AOP research efforts by facilitating communication and collaboration between
CSS, Program Offices, and Regions.
AOP Wild
Collaborative
development of AOP
descriptions &.
evidence
AOP Xpjorer
Visualize
attribute
networks to
discover St
explore AOPs
in a broader
context
Effectopedia
Detailed development
of structured &
computational
AOPs
Intermediate
Effects DB
Put
chemical-related
AOP components
in a regulatory
context
AOP-K
Hub
Third
Party
Applications
pluqins
ha red chemical, biological an
icotagical onto Id
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A Successful EPA Chemical Safety Data Summit Held In Research Triangle Park, NC
EPA's Chemical Safety Data Summit: Exploring How to Use ToxCast Data held on September 29th and 30th was
very successful at bringing together a wide range of stakeholders to discuss how to use massive amounts of
new chemical safety data from high-throughput screening technologies to better inform chemical policy and
regulatory decisions. Over 200 stakeholders participated in person and over 80 stakeholders tuned in remotely
via webinar. Jim Jones, Assistant Administrator for EPA's Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
kicked off the Summit by presenting his vision for how EPA can use this data to prioritize the thousands of
chemicals EPA is responsible for regulating, A diversity of presentations and posters were also presented by
academia, industry, federal government, international government, and non-governmental groups. Examples
of groups presenting at the Summit include Harvard University, DOW Chemical, Duke University, Health
Canada, American Chemistry Council and Green Screen. Closing remarks were delivered by Robert Kavlock,
EPA's Office of Research and Development Deputy Assistant Administrator for Science who said, the future is
looking bright for EPA's ToxCast program. The local North Carolina Public Radio (UNC-NPR) station promoted
the Summit during its Morning Edition segment and BNA wrote an article (see below) about how EPA foresees
the use of these new tests in the endocrine program. A Greenwire reporter participated via webinar and a
Chemical Engineering News reporter is writing an article for one of their November issues. Summit materials
including presentations, poster abstracts and a recording of the Summit will be posted here:
https://sites.goo.gle.com/site/toxcastdatasummit/.
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Research Study of PFCs in Bald Eagle Nestlings in the Upper Midwestern United
States
Due to their unique properties of repelling both water and oil,
perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) are useful in a variety of industrial
and consumer products—cookware, firefighting foams, pesticides,
etc.—and have been in production since the 1950s, PFCs are of
concern due to their widespread history of use, persistence in the
environment, propensity to bioaccumulate in animal tissues, and
growing evidence of toxicity.
EPA scientists have collaborated with the U.S. National Park Service Great Lakes Inventory and Monitoring
Network and the National Wildlife Health Center to produce a five-year study, published June 2014, assessing
levels of 16 different PFCs in 261 bald eagle nestlings from the upper Midwest, United States, The objectives
of this study were to evaluate the spatial patterns and temporal trends on 16 PFC compounds in the region
and to suggest implications of exposure to humans and wildlife.
The bald eagle nestlings served as good indicators of local PFC contamination in the upper Midwest, showing
that levels of all 16 PFCs, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), and perfluorodecane sulfonate (PFDS) —a long-
chained PFC with the potential for high bioaccumulation and toxicity—were highest in more urban and
industrial areas, moderate on Lake Superior, and low on the upper St. Croix River watershed. After a thorough
review of the results, researchers recommend that PFDS should be considered for future animal and human
toxicity and exposure studies.
The full published paper can be accessed and read here.
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Paper Reviews the Use of ToxCast Program Approaches for
Chemical Safety Risk Assessments
In April, EPA scientists published a paper in Basic & Clinical Pharmacology &
Toxicology entitled "In Vitro and Modeling Approaches to Risk Assessment from
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ToxCast Program." The review
discusses Phase 1 of EPA's Computational Toxicology ToxCast project, including:
the chemical and assay selection process, chemical testing, model building and
reverse toxicokinetics. The paper also gives examples of where ToxCast,
combined with ExpoCast, can be used to develop higher throughput risk based
evaluations. To read more about this article, click here.
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Publication on Risks of Pharmaceuticals to Wildlife and Ecosystems Just Released
Two articles co-authored by EPA scientists have been featured in The Royal
Society's Philosophical Transactions of Biological Sciences journal as part of their
special theme issue on "Assessing risks and impacts of pharmaceuticals in the
environment on wildlife and ecosystems." The issue highlights some of the latest
research on pharmaceuticals in the environment and serves to inform scientific
and policy concerns regarding their environmental impacts. Access to the articles
below and the rest of the issue is available online through the publisher's
website.
•	"Medicating the environment: assessing risks of pharmaceuticals to
wildlife and ecosystems"
•	"Leveraging existing chemical data for prioritization of the ecological risks
of human and veterinary pharmaceuticals to aquatic organisms"
PHILOSOPHICAL
TRANSACTIONS^
THE ROYAL MsI
SOCIETY JJJ/i
—

M Assessing risks and impacts of pharmaceuticals
1 in the environment on wildlife and ecosystems
G«&eT.Mikr aid Hr.n f. lumprti

-J"
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Royal Society Publishing
19 2014
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National Research Council Releases Framework to Guide Selection of Chemical
Alternatives:
At the request of the EPA, the National Research Council (NRC) released A
Framework to Guide the Selection of Chemical Alternatives report on October
10, 2014, EPA asked NRC to form a diverse scientific committee to
recommend a decision framework for industry and government to use to
evaluate potentially safer substitute chemicals. This framework includes
several important unique elements or advancements, such as:
•	An increased emphasis on comparative exposure assessment
•	Increased use of physicochemical properties to assess human health and
ecotoxicity hazards
•	A two-tiered approach to evaluating chemical alternatives that includes
health and ecotoxicity, followed by a consideration of broader impacts
•	Recognition of the need for research and innovation
• • •
A Framework
to Guide Selection of
CHEMICAL ALTERNATIVES
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EPA Honors Winners of the 19th Annual Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge
Awards: Winning Technologies Tackle Climate Change and Promote Energy
Efficiency
EPA recognized landmark green chemistry technologies developed by industrial pioneers and leading scientists
that turn climate risk into business opportunities, spurring innovation and economic development. These
technologies contribute to the use of chemicals and products that are safer for people's health and the
environment. They are helping to solve some of our most pressing environmental problems, including climate
change, water availability and pollution, and hazardous waste while improving the bottom line for America's
manufacturing sector. This year's promising innovations include:
•	Developing renewable fuel that may create 82% less GHGs than petroleum diesel
•	Making life-like-color LED TVs using 40k gal less toxics per year
•	Creating a better firefighting foam without toxic chemicals
•	Using oxygen instead of hazardous chemicals in key step to produce pharmaceuticals
•	Making vegetable oil from microalgae to replace petroleum in industrial chemicals
For the listing of winners, please read the EPA news release.
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Upcoming & Recent Events
EPA's Computational Toxicology Communities of Practice (CoP) Webinar
Please join us on November 20th for next
month's Computational Toxicology
Communities of Practice. This particular
seminar is being held a week earlier than the
usual 4th Thursday of the month due to the
federal holiday, John Wambaugh from EPA's
National Center for Computational
Toxicology will give a presentation about the
progress of EPA's high-throughput exposure
prediction research project. For more
information on this or other presentations,
please visit the Communities of Practice
webpage.
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3rd Annual American Society for Cellular and Computational Toxicology Meeting
The American Society for Cellular arid Computational Toxicology is hosting its 3rd Annual meeting:
"Where Chemistry and Biology Meet: AOPs as a Framework for Advancing Toxicology", on November 12,
2014, at the Lister Hill Auditorium at NIH. AOPs theme will be explored from three different perspectives and
feature talks by Robert Kavlock of EPA, Jennie Larkin and Ajay Pillai from NIH, and Mark Cronin from Liverpool
John Moores University as well as a panel discussion. A few submitted abstracts will be selected for oral
presentations. The afternoon will include presentations from the Japanese Society for Alternatives to Animal
Experiments and the Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing. Please visit www.ascctox.org for more
information and a link to the registration page.
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EPA Research at Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry Meeting
EPA will participate in the upcoming SETAC North American Annual Meeting on November 9-13, 2014 in
Vancouver, BC, Canada. EPA staff will make presentations featuring Adverse Outcome Pathways research,
models to predict effects of chemicals on the environment and how EPA is using strategic stakeholder
outreach to encourage the use of chemical data resulting from high-throughput screening technologies. EPA
also sponsoring a booth which will feature live demonstrations of tools that can be used to help predict
ecological risks of chemicals. EPA staff will be available at the booth to meet with SETAC participants.
SETAC North America
35th Annual Meeting
9-13 NOVEMBER 2014
VANCOUVER, BC
Submit abstracts with
Late-breaking science!
• • •

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Grantees Corner
EPA Awards STAR Grants for new methods for Exposure Science in the 21st Century
Project
Through the Science to Achieve Results grant program, EPA has awarded $4.5
million to five universities to conduct innovative research to advance methods
for characterizing real-world human exposure to chemicals associated with
consumer products in indoor environments. EPA received a total of 33 grant
proposals and is awarding research funding to: Develop and/or apply
innovative technologies and methods to characterize the presence and co-
occurrence of suites of semivolatile chemicals (dozens to hundreds) in real-
world indoor environments associated with the emissions from and use of
consumer products; Generate data to advance the scientific basis of exposure
predictions by providing values for key model parameters, building confidence
in model assumptions, and confirming model predictions for relevant
pathways; and Develop and/or apply innovative technologies and methods to
profile chemicals and related metabolites associated with consumer products in biological media. This funding
has been awarded to: University of California, Davis; Duke University; University of California, San Francisco;
University of Michigan; and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
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EPA Funding Research on Susceptibility and Variability in Human Response to
Chemical Exposure
The Susceptibility and Variability in Human Response to Chemical Exposure STAR
grant provides funding to study life stage and/or genetic susceptibility in order to
better characterize the sources of human variability in response to chemical
exposures. Drs. Ivan Rusyn and Fred A. Wright from Texas A&M University and
North Carolina State University have been awarded $800,000 to pursue their
research on the toxicogenetics of tetrachloroethylene (TCE), a chemical regulated
by EPA for potential human health risks. The three-year study will evaluate how
differences in human genetic makeup may affect the way TCE is metabolized and its
target organs of toxicity using mice as an animal model.
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Employment Opportunities
Post-Doctoral Research Program
In FY 1998, ORD began to enhance its scientific workforce by attracting first rate postdoctoral scientists and
engineers into its research program through this new hiring initiative. Over 300 postdoctoral researchers have
participated in the program to date. The program offers appointments of up to four years, state-of-the-art
facilities, world-class scientific expertise, locations throughout the United States, travel to professional
scientific meetings, and active postdoctoral trainee organizations. Participants receive full benefits and a
salary commensurate with qualifications and locality pay adjustments.
For a current listing of EPA postdoctoral positions, please visit this web page.
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CSS in the News
Recent News Articles
•	U.S., European Agencies Publicly Releasing Adverse Outcome
Pathway Wiki in September—BNA
•	International Nano Scientists Converge at USC. Talk Future Effects—
ChemicalWatch
•	Academies to Advise POD on Emerging Toxicity Tests. Protecting
Soldiers in Combat—BNA
•	EPA Foresees Use of Four Robotic Tests in Endocrine Program—BNA
•	Canada Building on Progress with the CMP—ChemicalWatch
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to CSS Pathways
Thank you for reading CSS Pathways: Anticipating Impacts of Chemicals, October issue. If you
do not regularly receive our quarterly updates and would like to be added to the distribution
listserv, please let us know by contacting LaCresha Styles (stvles.lacresha@epa.gov).
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