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Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 107, Number 5, May 1999 Open Access
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Effect of Neonatal Exposure to Estrogenic Compounds on Development of the Excurrent Ducts of the Rat Testis through Puberty to Adulthood

Jane S. Fisher,1 Katie J. Turner,1 Dennis Brown,2 and Richard M. Sharpe1

1Medical Research Council Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, Edinburgh, Scotland EH3 9EW
2Renal Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, MA 02129 USA

Abstract

Neonatal exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES) can alter the structure of the testicular excurrent ducts in rats. We characterized these changes according to dose and time posttreatment and established whether potent estrogens (ethinyl estradiol) , environmental estrogens (genistein, octylphenol, bisphenol A, parabens) , and tamoxifen induce such changes. Rats were administered these compounds neonatally and assessed at several time points during (day 10, or day 18 for some treatments) and after (days 18, 25, 35, and 75) the treatment period to detect any changes in testis weight, distension of the rete testis and efferent ducts, epithelial cell height in the efferent ducts, and immunoexpression of the water channel aquaporin-1 (AQP-1) . Treatment with DES (10, 1, or 0.1 µg/injection ; equivalent to 0.37, 0.037, or 0.0037 mg/kg/day, respectively) induced dose-dependent changes in testis weight and all parameters. These effects were most pronounced at days 18 and 25 and appeared to lessen with time, although some persisted into adulthood. Neonatal treatment with ethinyl estradiol (10 µg/injection ; equivalent to 0.37 mg/kg/day) caused changes broadly similar to those induced by 10 µg DES. Administration of tamoxifen (2 mg/kg/day) caused changes at 18 days that were similar to those induced by 1 µg DES. Treatment with genistein (4 mg/kg/day) , octylphenol (2 mg/injection ; equivalent to 150 mg/kg/day) , or bisphenol A (0.5 mg/injection ; equivalent to 37 mg/kg/day) caused minor but significant (p<0.05) decreases in epithelial cell height of the efferent ducts at days 18 and/or 25. In animals that were followed through to 35 days and/or adulthood, these changes were no longer obvious ; other parameters were either unaffected or were affected only marginally and transiently. Administration of parabens (2 mg/kg/day) had no detectable effect on any parameter at day 18. To establish whether these effects of estrogens were direct or indirect (i.e., resulting from reduced follicle-stimulating hormone/luteinizing hormone secretion) , the above end points were assessed in animals in which gonadotropin secretion was suppressed neonatally by administration of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist. This treatment permanently reduced testis weight, but did not affect any of the other end points, apart from a minor transient reduction in efferent duct epithelial cell height at 18 days. This study suggests that structural and functional (expression of AQP-1) development of the excurrent ducts is susceptible to impairment by neonatal estrogen exposure, probably as a consequence of direct effects. The magnitude and duration of adverse changes induced by treatment with a range of estrogenic compounds was broadly comparable to their estrogenic potencies reported from in vitro assays. Key words: , , , , , , , , . Environ Health Perspect 107:397-405 (1999) . [Online 6 April 1999]

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1999/107p397-405fisher/ abstract.html

Address correspondence to J.S. Fisher, Medical Research Council Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, 37 Chalmers Street, Edinburgh, Scotland, EH3 9EW.

We are grateful to Shelia Macpherson, Michelle Morley, and Stacey Reid for their technical assistance.

This work was supported in part by the European Centre for Ecotoxicology of Chemicals and by Zenecca.

Received 30 November 1998 ; accepted 18 February 1999.


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