| Literature DB >> 26927151 |
Nicolas Defarge1,2, Eszter Takács3, Verónica Laura Lozano4, Robin Mesnage5,6, Joël Spiroux de Vendômois7, Gilles-Eric Séralini8,9, András Székács10.
Abstract
Pesticide formulations contain declared active ingredients and co-formulants presented as inert and confidential compounds. We tested the endocrine disruption of co-formulants in six glyphosate-based herbicides (GBH), the most used pesticides worldwide. All co-formulants and formulations were comparably cytotoxic well below the agricultural dilution of 1% (18-2000 times for co-formulants, 8-141 times for formulations), and not the declared active ingredient glyphosate (G) alone. The endocrine-disrupting effects of all these compounds were measured on aromatase activity, a key enzyme in the balance of sex hormones, below the toxicity threshold. Aromatase activity was decreased both by the co-formulants alone (polyethoxylated tallow amine-POEA and alkyl polyglucoside-APG) and by the formulations, from concentrations 800 times lower than the agricultural dilutions; while G exerted an effect only at 1/3 of the agricultural dilution. It was demonstrated for the first time that endocrine disruption by GBH could not only be due to the declared active ingredient but also to co-formulants. These results could explain numerous in vivo results with GBHs not seen with G alone; moreover, they challenge the relevance of the acceptable daily intake (ADI) value for GBHs exposures, currently calculated from toxicity tests of the declared active ingredient alone.Entities:
Keywords: JEG3 cells; aromatase; co-formulant; endocrine disruption; glyphosate-based herbicide; pesticide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26927151 PMCID: PMC4808927 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13030264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Toxicological and chemical characteristics of the glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs), the co-formulants, and the declared active ingredient (dAI) investigated in this study. Contents in co-formulants and glyphosate (type of salt and equivalent in glyphosate acid) are indicated for the GBH formulations. LC50 (ppm) were calculated by nonlinear regression using asymmetric (5-parameters) equation with GraphPad Prism 5 after mitochondrial respiration inhibition measurement in JEG3 cells (MTT assay, see Figure 1). No Observed Effect Concentration (NOEC) and Lowest Observed Effect Concentration (LOEC, corresponding to the threshold of toxicity) were determined by MTT assay for each compound. They respectively correspond to the highest concentration without significant cytotoxic effect and to the lowest concentration with significant cytotoxic effect (in ppm). Can Canada, IPA isopropyl ammonium, G glyphosate, Hun Hungary.
| Products | Trade Name (Manufacturer, Country) | Declared Active Ingredient (dAI) | dAI (%) | Present in | (ppm) | NOEC | LOEC | LC50 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| POEA | Emulson AG GPE 3SS (Lamberti, Ita) | Polyethoxylated tallow amine | 100 | Roundup Classic, Glyfos | 3.0 | 3.5 | 3.9 | ||
| POEA/F | Emulson AG GPE 3/SSM (Lamberti, Ita) | Polyethoxylated tallow amine | 70 | Roundup Classic, Glyfos | 4.0 | 4.5 | 4.7 | ||
| QAC | Emulson AG CB 30 (Lamberti, Ita) | Quaternary ammonium compound | 30 | other herbicides | 35 | 50 | 58 | ||
| POE-APE | Rolfen Bio (Lamberti, Ita) | POE alkyl phosphate ether | 70 | other herbicides | 150 | 200 | 222 | ||
| APG | Plantapon LGC (The Soap kitchen, UK) | Alkyl polyglucoside | 28.5–34.0 | Medallon Premium | 200 | 400 | 421 | ||
| G salt of (g/L) | G (g/L) | Co-formulants (%) | |||||||
| RWMAX | Roundup WeatherMAX (Monsanto, Can) | Potassium (660) | 540 | Petroleum distillate /Transorb2 | 60 | 70 | 71 | ||
| Glyfos | Glyfos (Cheminova, Hun) | IPA (486) | 360 | 9% POEA | 75 | 85 | 86 | ||
| R Classic | Roundup Classic (Monsanto, Hun) | IPA (486) | 360 | 15,5% POEA | 75 | 80 | 89 | ||
| Kapazin | Kapazin (Arysta, Hun) | IPA (486) | 360 | C8-10 ethoxylated alcohol (<2 g/L), Triethylene glycol monobutyl ether (<2 g/L) | 75 | 85 | 128 | ||
| Total | Total (Sinon Corporation, Hun) | IPA (486) | 360 | 58.5% unknown surfactant | 100 | 125 | 130 | ||
| Medallon | Medallon Premium (Syngenta, Hun) | diammonium (433) | 360 | 10%–20% APG (150 g/L) | 500 | 600 | 1268 | ||
| G | Glyphosate isopropyl ammonium (Hun) | IPA (486) | 360 | 3100 | 4600 | 7878 | |||
Chemical structures of the co-formulants and declared active ingredient of glyphosate-based herbicides investigated in this study. CAS registry numbers are declared by the manufacturers or suppliers.
| Chemical Structure | CAS RN * | Chemical Class of Substance Group/Substance Name |
|---|---|---|
| 61791-26-2 | polyethoxylated tallowamine (POEA) (R = C14–C18) ( | |
| 383178-66-3 + 110615-47-9 | alkyl polyglucosides (APG) ( | |
| 68130-47-2 + 50769-39-6 | polyoxyethylene alkyl ether phosphates (POE-APE) ( | |
| 66455-29-6 | quaternary ammonium compound (QAC) | |
| 386411-94-0 | isopropylamine salt of glyphosate | |
* Chemical Abstracts Registry Number.
Figure 1Dose-dependent cytotoxic effects of various glyphosate-based herbicide formulations or co-formulants or the declared active ingredient (dAI) glyphosate alone (G) in the JEG3 human cell line.
Figure 2Inhibition of cell respiration by co-formulants and formulations at similar levels. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. (A) 100 ppm of Glyfos is compared to the content in POEA (10 ppm) and G (48.6 ppm); (B) 100 ppm of Glyfos is compared to the content in POEA (10 ppm) and G (48.6 ppm); (C) 2000 ppm of Medallon is compared to the content in APG (800 ppm) and G (975 ppm); (D) 100 ppm of the formulations are compared to the content in G (48.6 ppm). Two co-formulants were also tested around their LC50 (QAC, 58 ppm; POE-APE, 222 ppm, see Table 1).
Figure 3Membrane integrity disruption by formulations and co-formulants. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. (A) 100 ppm of Glyfos is compared to the content in POEA (10 ppm) and G (48.6 ppm); (B) 100 ppm of Glyfos is compared to the content in POEA (10 ppm) and G (48.6 ppm); (C) 2000 ppm of Medallon is compared to the content in APG (800 ppm) and G (975 ppm); (D) 100 ppm of the formulations are compared to the content in G (48.6 ppm); Two co-formulants were also tested around their LC50 (see Table 1): (E) QAC, 58 ppm; (F) POE-APE, 222 ppm.
Figure 4Aromatase inhibition by formulations and their co-formulants alone at similar levels. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. (A) 25 ppm of Glyfos is compared to the content in POEA (2.5 ppm) and glyphosate (16 ppm); (B) 300 ppm of Medallon is compared to the content in APG (120 ppm) and glyphosate (146 ppm). These concentrations are 1.2–2 times below the NOEC and 1.4–3.4 below the toxicity threshold (LOEC).
Figure 5Inhibition of aromatase by co-formulants and formulations. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. (A) 25 ppm of the co-formulant QAC is compared to the negative control (C) and to the positive control formestane (F); (B) 100 ppm of the co-formulant POE-APE is compared to the negative control (C) and to the positive control formestane (F); (C) 50 ppm of formulations of glyphosate-based herbicides R WeatherMAX—R WMAX—Glyfos, R Classic, Kapazin and Total is compared to the negative control (C) and to the positive control formestane (F). Glyphosate alone (isopropyl ammonium salt form) was also tested at its dose present in the formulations (24.3 ppm).