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Environmental Endocrine Disruptors 1960’s • Eagles – Eggshells – DDT affected reproduction • Mink – Lake Michigan – Repro failure – Fed lake fish – Those fed fish from other sources normal 1970’s • Fish-eating birds – Gulf Coast, Great Lakes – Abnormalities of repro structures/functions – Malformed offspring • Women – DES daughters – Repro cancers • Rare cell changes – vagina, oviducts, uteri – Repro organ dysfunction/disfigurement – Estrogen replacement repro effects • (DES – Potent estrogenic – Growth stimulant in cattle – Miscarriage prevention in women) • Men – DES sons • Abnormalities of genitalia, sperm • Testicular cancer • Undescended testicles – Kepone spill • Low sperm count 1980’s • Male alligators – DDT – 1/2 testosterone – Small penis size – Repro capacity?? 1990’s • Male wildlife – Various cmpds in water – Sea gulls • Eggs exposed to DDT female – Turtles • Eggs exposed to PCB’s female – Male-producing temps – Same as estrogen exposure – Fish • Polluted water • Vitellogenin – Egg yolk protein – Female fish-laying eggs – Abs’d into ovaries • Remains in tissue of males • Also female fish masculinized • Used as biomarker • Laboratory Animal Studies – Drugs/toxins @ diff stages neonatal dev’t – Sensitive @ spec times of dev’t – Irreversibility – Too much/too little may be harmful • Too little testosterone testicular feminization – “Behavior sex” of brain • If no androgens phenotypic female • Estrogen masculinizes brain – Brief exposure ONLY • Affects repro ability later in life – Detox low doses tolerable • BUT higher doses overwhelm metab • Human sperm count depleted?? – 50% drop 1938-1990?? • Incr’d human prostate, testicular cancers reported • Poss female repro dysfunctions – Incr’d human breast, ovarian cancer rates – Incr’d PolyCystic Ovarian Disease • Related to neonatal androgenization (rodents) • early onset estrus acyclicity What Are Endocrine Disruptors? • EPA – “Exogenous substance that changes endocrine function and causes adverse effects at the level of the organism, its progeny and/or (sub)populations of organisms” • May act like endogenous hormones – OR metabolites can act like hormones – OR can block effects of opp sex hormones, growth factors, other hormones Estradiol DES DDT Nonylphenol Kepone Bisphenol A Tributyl tin (androgenic in Invertebrates) Characteristics of Endocrine “Mimics” • Persistence • Bioaccumulation • High potency • Critical periods of vulnerability • Absence of permanent exposure markers • Transgenerational effects • Subtle biological outcomes • “Natural” signal sent by “unnatural” molecule • Don’t alter genes • Do change way genes expressed How Natural Estrogens Work • Target organs – Breast – Bone – Liver – Repro organs – Cardiovascular system • Chemical signals • Steroid hormones – Prod’d from cholesterol – Synth’d from testosterone – Secr’d from ovaries, testes when brain hormone signals – Transported att’d to transport proteins • Fat soluble – Pass directly into cells – Receptors in cytoplasm, nucleus Progesterone: a progestin, produced directly from pregnenolone and secreted from the corpus luteum, responsible for changes associated with luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, differentiation factor for mammary glands Testosterone: an androgen, male sex hormone synthesized in the testes, responsible for secondary male sex characteristics, produced from progesterone precursor Estradiol: an estrogen, principal female sex hormone, produced in the ovary, responsible for secondary female sex characteristics • Estrogen receptor – Large protein – In target cells only – At least two (a, b) – Two binding sites • Estrogen • DNA • Estrogen+receptor complex nucleus – Binds regulatory regions of specific genes – At DNA regulatory site • “Estrogen Response Element” – Gene promoter near ERE – Activates, represses expression • Through proteins bound to promoter • Effects transcription of gene – Gene expr’n modulated for duration receptor bound to ERE – Examples of estrogenic genes • Progesterone receptor gene • Growth factor genes • Growth factor receptor genes Environmental Estrogen Binding to Estrogen Receptor • Receptor apparently not completely specific – Not all estrogenics “look like” estrogen – Some atomic structures/distances impt • Binding of mimics may – Estrogenic activity – Inhib’n natural estrogen binding (antiestrogenic) • Most bind weakly BUT to strong effect – Receptor binding strength not correlated w/ estrogenicity • Binding extracell prot’s may be impt (ex: DES) – Binds estrogen receptor weakly – BUT binds serum binding prot less tightly than nat’l estrogen • More DES avail to enter cell • Some must be act’d metabolically (ex: PAH’s) – Hydroxylation nec to mimic estrogen – Enhances affinity for receptor Estrogenics • Synergism possible – Ex: Study of dieldrin, endosulfan, toxaphene, chlordane – Weakly estrogenic alone – In combination estrogenicty incr’d 1601600 fold • Some physically combine – Form more estrogen-like molecule • Some bind sites other than estrogen receptor – May be @ site other than estrogen binding site – Probably interactive – Stronger response when both occupied (perhaps one w/ endogenous estrogen) • Some may bind subunits of receptor together – more strongly functioning unit – Dimer may bind ERE • May affect synthesis natural estrogen • May affect release of nat’l estrogen into circulation • May alter synth pathways, metab of natural hormones Growth Factors Affect Estrogen Activity • Estrogens act through EGF, IGF, TFGa • Cell membr receptors bind factors • Get series intracell biochem rxns • One endpoint of signal cascades is estrogen receptor transcr’n • Estrogenics may affect growth factors – Interaction w/ factors – Binding of factor receptors • Overall change estrogenicity Is There a Problem? • Public opinion against regulation/study – Wildlife effects “esoteric” – Not enough scientific evidence – Too alarmist • Public opinion for regulation/study – Effects are clear – Human-wildlife link believable – Cancers, birth defects, red’d sperm ct frightening • Risks to humans/wildlife/environment – Need 5x amt DES to equal estradiol – Admin DES @250-350 mg/kg during pregnancy • Mother breast cancer 0.35 risk • Daughter cerv. cancer 0.001 risk • Daughter birth defect 0.3 risk • Not only isolated chem’s at work in wildlife – Evidence mostly relates to persistent substances (DDT, kepone) • No longer legal • Removal not related to hormonal effects • Effects mostly related to specific sites – Difficult to prove one chem. effect • Wildlife studies isolated – Magnitude of doses – Synergism? – Fish studies showed vitellogenesis in vitro, not in field tests • Lab animals good models? • Tissue culture samples valid? EPA Task Force • Food Quality Protection Act, Safe Drinking Water Act • Best models • Best cmpds to test • Validity analytical techniques • End points assigned • Risk vs. cost Large-Scale Clean-Up?? • Much $$$ • Nec for societal overall health, wellbeing? • Nec for public health? Environmental health? • Nec for wildlife propagation?