| Literature DB >> 24279817 |
Katherine Flynn1, Maria Belopolsky Wedin, Josephine A Bonventre, Marsha Dillon-White, Jessica Hines, Benjamin S Weeks, Chantale André, Martin P Schreibman, Francois Gagné.
Abstract
The widely used herbicide atrazine (ATR) may have endocrine-associated adverse effects, including on behavior. In this study, 120 adult freshwater mussels, Elliptio complanata, were exposed to ATR at the environmentally relevant concentrations of 1.5, 15, or 150 μg/L. Burrowing depth was evaluated hourly for 6 h and at sacrifice animals were sexed by gonad smear. Female controls burrowed overall approximately 30% less than males, the first report of sexual dimorphism in this behavior. Atrazine at 15 μg/L feminized burrowing in both sexes, in that exposed animals burrowed 20% less than their same-sex controls. Males treated with 1.5 μg /L ATR displayed approximately 20-fold higher vitellogenin (VTG) levels than same-sex controls. Higher concentrations of ATR were not associated with increasing effects. A scatterplot showed a weak binomial curve associating low burrowing with high VTG levels. Taken together, these data suggest a nonlinear dose response in behavioral and physiological feminization produced by ATR and support the need to reconsider the widespread use of this compound.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24279817 PMCID: PMC4369575 DOI: 10.1080/15287394.2013.845865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Toxicol Environ Health A ISSN: 0098-4108