EFFECTS OF DRINKING WATER QUALITY ON EPIGENETIC FACTORS: A MOLECULAR–HYGIENIC INVESTIGATION

loading.default
thumbnail.default.alt

item.page.date

item.page.journal-title

item.page.journal-issn

item.page.volume-title

item.page.publisher

Bright Mind Publishing

item.page.abstract

Drinking water quality plays a crucial yet often underestimated role in influencing epigenetic mechanisms that regulate gene expression and determine long-term health outcomes in human populations. As environmental exposures increasingly intersect with molecular biology, a growing body of evidence suggests that contaminants such as heavy metals, disinfection by-products, endocrine-disrupting chemicals, microbial metabolites, and nano-sized particles present in drinking water can induce stable yet reversible epigenetic alterations involving DNA methylation, histone modifications, non-coding RNA dynamics, chromatin remodeling, and transgenerational regulatory changes.

item.page.description

item.page.citation

item.page.collections

item.page.endorsement

item.page.review

item.page.supplemented

item.page.referenced