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1.
Environ Toxicol ; 29(2): 199-206, 2014 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22120997

RESUMO

A range of chemicals found in the aquatic environment have the potential to influence endocrine function and affect sexual development by mimicking or antagonizing the effects of hormones, or by altering the synthesis and metabolism of hormones. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the effects of chemicals interfering with sex hormone synthesis may affect the regulation of early ovarian development via the modulation of sex steroid and insulin-like growth factor (IGF) systems. To this end, ex vivo ovary cultures of juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta fario) were exposed for 2 days to either 1,4,6-androstatriene-3,17-dione (ATD, a specific aromatase inhibitor), prochloraz (an imidazole fungicide), or tributyltin (TBT, a persistent organic pollutant). Further, juvenile female brown trout were exposed in vivo for 2 days to prochloraz or TBT. The ex vivo and in vivo ovarian gene expression of the aromatase (CYP19), responsible for estrogen production, and of IGF1 and 2 were compared. Moreover, 17ß-estradiol (E2) and testosterone (T) production from ex vivo ovary cultures was assessed. Ex vivo exposure to ATD inhibited ovarian E2 synthesis, while T levels accumulated. However, ATD did not affect ex vivo expression of cyp19, igf1, or igf2. Ex vivo exposure to prochloraz inhibited ovarian E2 production, but did not affect T levels. Further prochloraz up-regulated igf1 expression in both ex vivo and in vivo exposures. TBT exposure did not modify ex vivo synthesis of either E2 or T. However, in vivo exposure to TBT down-regulated igf2 expression. The results indicate that ovarian inhibition of E2 production in juvenile brown trout might not directly affect cyp19 and igf gene expression. Thus, we suggest that the test chemicals may interfere with both sex steroid and IGF systems in an independent manner, and based on published literature, potentially lead to endocrine dysfunction and altered sexual development.


Assuntos
Disruptores Endócrinos/toxicidade , Ovário/efeitos dos fármacos , Truta , Poluentes Químicos da Água/toxicidade , Androstatrienos/toxicidade , Animais , Aromatase/genética , Inibidores da Aromatase/toxicidade , Estradiol/metabolismo , Feminino , Fungicidas Industriais/toxicidade , Expressão Gênica/efeitos dos fármacos , Imidazóis/toxicidade , Fator de Crescimento Insulin-Like I/genética , Fator de Crescimento Insulin-Like II/genética , Ovário/metabolismo , Testosterona/metabolismo , Compostos de Trialquitina/toxicidade , Truta/genética , Truta/metabolismo
2.
Mutat Res ; 564(1): 21-9, 2004 Nov 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15474407

RESUMO

Four steroids that share the 17-hydroxy-3-oxopregna-4,6-diene structure - cyproterone acetate, chlormadinone acetate, megestrol acetate, and potassium canrenoate - have been shown previously to behave with different potency as liver-specific genotoxic agents, the response being markedly higher in female than in male rats, but similar in humans of both genders. In this study, performed to better define the relationship between chemical structure and genotoxicity, dydrogesterone (DGT) with double bonds C4=C5 and C6=C7, dienogest (DNG) with double bonds C4=C5 and C9=C10, and 1,4,6-androstatriene-17beta-ol-3-one acetate (ADT) with double bonds C1=C2, C4=C5 and C6=C7, were compared with cyproterone acetate (CPA) for their ability to induce DNA fragmentation and DNA repair synthesis in primary cultures of hepatocytes from three rats of each sex. At subtoxic concentrations, ranging from 10 to 90 microM, all four steroids consistently induced a dose-dependent increase of DNA fragmentation, which in all cases was higher in females than in males; their DNA damaging potency decreased in the order CPA > DNG > ADT > DGT. Under the same experimental conditions, the responses provided by the DNA repair-synthesis assay were positive or inconclusive in hepatocytes from female rats and consistently negative in hepatocytes from male rats. In the induction of apoptotic cells, examined in primary hepatocytes from female rats, CPA was more active than ADT and DGT, and DNG was inactive. Considered as a whole these findings suggest that a liver-specific genotoxic effect more marked in female than in male rats might be a common property of steroids with two or three double bonds.


Assuntos
Androstatrienos/toxicidade , Apoptose , Fragmentação do DNA , Reparo do DNA , Didrogesterona/toxicidade , Hepatócitos/efeitos dos fármacos , Nandrolona/análogos & derivados , Nandrolona/toxicidade , Androstatrienos/química , Animais , Inibidores da Aromatase/química , Inibidores da Aromatase/toxicidade , Células Cultivadas , DNA/efeitos dos fármacos , Didrogesterona/química , Feminino , Hepatócitos/citologia , Hepatócitos/fisiologia , Antagonistas de Hormônios/química , Antagonistas de Hormônios/toxicidade , Masculino , Estrutura Molecular , Testes de Mutagenicidade , Nandrolona/química , Ratos , Ratos Sprague-Dawley
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