Abstract

This study conducted a network pharmacology-based analysis to simultaneously discern a broad spectrum of potential environmental risks and health effects of antidepressants, a common class of pharmaceutical emerging contaminants (PECs) possessing a complex pharmacological profile, and in silico predict the adverse phenotypes potentially occurring in fish associated with exposure to antidepressants and their mixtures under realistic exposure scenarios. Results showed that 24 of the included 39 antidepressants had been detected worldwide in water environment across 50 countries. Using the environmentally realistic exposure scenario for China as an example, the predicted blood concentrations of antidepressant residues that were generated based on the Fish Plasma Model ranged from 37.89 (Alprazolam) to 16,772.05 (Sertraline) ng/L in exposed fish. Hazard-based bioactivity network without regard to concentration data was composed of 148 potential targets and 701 antidepressant-target interactions. After filtering each antidepressant-target interaction node using the predicted drug concentrations in the blood of fish under realistic exposure scenarios in China, an environmental risk-based network was refined and showed that 11 targets, including muscarinic acetylcholine receptor M1, alpha-2B adrenergic receptor, serotonin 2 A receptor, etc. might be modulated by antidepressants at concentrations equal to or below the environmental exposure levels and their mixtures in fish. Environmentally relevant concentrations of antidepressants in water samples from China might perturb the behavior, stress response, phototaxis, and development in exposed fish.

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