| Literature DB >> 28388912 |
Pauline Vabre1, Nicolas Gatimel1,2, Jessika Moreau1, Véronique Gayrard3,4, Nicole Picard-Hagen3,4, Jean Parinaud5,6, Roger D Leandri1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Because only 25% of cases of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) have a known etiology, the aim of this review was to summarize the associations and mechanisms of the impact of the environment on this pathology. Eligible studies were selected from an electronic literature search from the PUBMED database from January 2000 to February 2016 and associated references in published studies. Search terms included ovary, follicle, oocyte, endocrine disruptor, environmental exposure, occupational exposure, environmental contaminant, pesticide, polyaromatic hydrocarbon, polychlorinated biphenyl PCB, phenol, bisphenol, flame retardant, phthalate, dioxin, phytoestrogen, tobacco, smoke, cigarette, cosmetic, xenobiotic. The literature search was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. We have included the human and animal studies corresponding to the terms and published in English. We have excluded articles that included results that did not concern ovarian pathology and those focused on ovarian cancer, polycystic ovary syndrome, endometriosis or precocious puberty. We have also excluded genetic, auto-immune or iatrogenic causes from our analysis. Finally, we have excluded animal data that does not concern mammals and studies based on results from in vitro culture. Data have been grouped according to the studied pollutants in order to synthetize their impact on follicular development and follicular atresia and the molecular pathways involved. Ninety-seven studies appeared to be eligible and were included in the present study, even though few directly address POI. Phthalates, bisphenol A, pesticides and tobacco were the most reported substances having a negative impact on ovarian function with an increased follicular depletion leading to an earlier age of menopause onset. These effects were found when exposure occured at different times throughout the lifetime from the prenatal to the adult period, possibly due to different mechanisms. The main mechanism seemed to be an increase in atresia of pre-antral follicles.Entities:
Keywords: Environment; Fertility; Ovarian reserve; Pollutants; Premature ovarian insufficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28388912 PMCID: PMC5384040 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-017-0242-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Main etiologies of premature ovarian insufficiency
| Etiologies | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Genetics: [ | - Monosomy X and mosaicism: Turner syndrome, triploid syndrome, partial deletion and X translocation |
| Iatrogenic: [ | - Pelvic, ovarian surgery |
| Autoimmune disease: [ | - Isolated |
| Metabolic: [ | - Congenital galactosemia |
| Infectious: [ | - HIV infection |
Fig. 1The different mechanisms inducing POI. Folliculogenesis (❶) begins after assembly (black arrows) of primordial follicles during second trimester of pregnancy. Activation of primordial follicles (green color) to enter the growth phase of folliculogenesis is continuous from third trimester of fetal life to menopause. This activation is driven by local factors and is independent of gonadotropins. Basal follicular growth (pink color) is driven by paracrine factors. From the early antral follicle stage, their growth depends on gonadotrophins to enter the final phase (orange color) up to ovulation. From the beginning, follicles undergo physiological atresia (blue lines around arrows), that participate to the decrease of the pool with years. Mechanisms leading to POI (symbolized by a final pale preovulatory follicle,): • decrease of the pool of primordial follicles (❺) either due to massive atresia (❺a) or default in assembly (❺b). • increase in follicular apoptosis concerning any other follicular stage (❷ and ❸). • increase of the activation (large green arrow) of the resting pool of primordial follicles (❹) resulting in its exhaustion. It is generally followed by increased atresia at following follicular stages (large blue arrow). • default in basal follicular growth leading to its arrest before the antral stages preventing ovulation while the pool of primordial follicles is normal (❻)
Search strategy: list of keywords used
| Search 1 | ||
| Ovary OR | AND | Endocrine disruptor* OR |
| Search 2 | ||
| Ovary OR | AND | Pesticide* OR |
Fig. 2Flow chart of the selection of articles
Effects of phthalates on ovarian function
| References | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Xu et al., 2010 [ | Female rats intragastrically exposed to benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) 5 and 10 mg/kg, to DEHP 300 and 600 mg/kg and B[a]P + DEHP for 60 days. | ⇘ number of primordial follicles (BaP 10 mg/kg ± DEHP 600 mg/kg) and of primary/secondary follicles (DEHP 600 mg/kg ± BaP 10 mg/kg) with granulosa cell apoptosis increased in DEHP, B[a]P and B[a]P + DEHP groups, implying a PPAR-mediated signaling pathway for both. No interaction effect was observed. |
| Moyer and Hixon, 2012 [ | Pregnant mice exposed by oral gavage to placebo or 100, 500 or 1000 mg/kg of MEHP during gestational days 17–19. | ⇘ by 1 month of reproductive lifespan in the highest F1 exposure group (9.8 ± 0.4 compared to 11.1 ± 0.6 months in the control F1 females) |
| Li et al., 2012 [ | 60 randomized adult mice in 4 groups exposed to 0, 125, 500 or 2000 mg/kg of DEHP by gavage for 16 weeks, 6 days/week | DEHP arrested granulosa cells in the G0/G1 phases of the cell cycle and ⇗ apoptosis in granulosa cells at 500 and 2000 mg/kg |
| Zhang et al., 2013 [ | Subcutaneous injections of DEHP of 20 and 40 μg/kg in newborn mice | ⇘ number of primordial follicles at puberty and adult age by accelerating follicular recruitment |
| Hannon et al., 2014 [ | Oral exposure of adult mice to DEHP (20 μg at 750 mg/kg/day) every day for 10 or 30 days. | ⇘ in the number of primordial follicles and ⇗ in the percentage of primary follicles via dysregulation of PI3K signaling |
| Li et al., 2014 [ | Pregnant mice treated with DEHP from 0 to 40 μg/kg/day from 0.5 to the 18.5th day post coitum. | ⇘ percentage of CpG sites in the differentially methylated regions of the oocytes in F1 mice, heritable to F2. |
| Zhang et al., 2015 [ | Pregnant mice exposed to DEHP, evaluation of the ovarian reserve in offspring generations | Delay of meiosis initiation in F1 fetal ovaries with Stra8 gene hypermethylation and underexpression |
| Niermann et al., 2015 [ | Pregnant mice exposed to DEHP from 20 μg to 750 mg/kg/day. Evaluation of the number of follicles at D8 and D21 and fertility at 3 and 9 months. | ⇗ number of pre-antral follicles at D21 with a non-monotonic dose-effect |
| Sen et al., 2015 [ | Mice exposed to DBP at 0.01, 0.1 and 1000 mg/kg/day for 10 days. | ⇘ number of antral follicles ⇗ mRNA coding for pro-apoptosis genes |
| Li et al., 2016 [ | Intraperitoneal injection of DEHP in newborn mice, 20 to 40 μg/kg, every 5 days. | ⇘ percentage of antral follicles. |
| Hannon et al., 2016 [ | Oral exposure of adult mice to DEHP (20 or 500 mg/kg/day) every day for 10 days | ⇗ BAX/BCL2 ratio in primordial follicles, ⇘ number of primordial follicles, 9 months after exposure. |
|
| ||
| Messerlian et al., 2016 [ | Assay of phthalate metabolites in urine and antral follicle count, prospective study on 215 patients between 2004 and 2012 | ⇘ antral follicle count in patients whose metabolite assay was in the higher quartiles compared to lower concentrations |
Effect of bisphenol A on ovarian function
| References | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Rodríguez et al., 2010 [ | Neonatal exposure of mice from D1 to D7 to BPA 0.05 or 20 mg/kg/day | ⇘ percentage of primordial follicles ⇗ percentages of growing follicles at 20 mg/kg/day dose by increased recruitment, ⇗ proliferation of granulosa cells at every follicular stage |
| Zhang et al., 2012 [ | Exposure of pregnant mice at 0.02, 0.04 or 0.08 mg/kg/day of orally administered BPA from Day 12.5 post coïtum. | ⇘ number of primordial follicles at D3 by defaults in assembly associated with. a delay in meiosis I progression ⇘ mRNA expression of specific meiotic genes |
| Li et al., 2014 [ | Intraperitoneal injection of 10, 40 or 160 mg/kg of BPA in prepubertal rats for 1 week | ⇘ ovary weight, ⇘ number of primordial follicles at the highest dose, dose –dependant ⇘ in numbers of total, primary/preantral and antral follicles, ⇗ number of atretic follicles |
| Berger et al., 2015 [ | Exposure of pregnant mice to BPA: 0.5, 20 or 50 μg/kg/day, histological analysis of ovaries and gene expression analysis at postnatal D4 and D21 from F1 to F3 | Alteration in the number of follicles for F1, but not for F2 and F3. Alterations in ovarian gene expression at D21 with a transgenerational effect |
Effects of pesticides on ovarian function
| References | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Zama and Uzumcu, 2009 [ | Prenatal exposure of pregnant rats to MXC 20 μg or 100 mg/kg/day from embryonic D19 until postnatal day 7. | DNA hypermethylation of several ovarian genes among which ER beta. |
| Park et al., 2014 [ | Oral exposure of pregnant mice from gestational D12 to post-natal day 20 with 5 to 500 μg/kg dose of Simazine. | ⇘ Ovarian weight and ⇗ apoptosis of granulosa cells in the F1 generation with downregulation of anti-apoptotic and proliferation genes |
| El-Sharkawy et al., 2014 [ | Oral exposure of female rats to 200 mg/kg twice weekly to MXC alone, or combined with propolis (a natural anti-oxydant) 200 mg/L for 10 months | ⇘ Ovarian weight, ⇗ atresia of primary, secondary and antral follicles, ⇘ ovarian antioxidant status and ⇗ in ovarian lipid peroxidation. Toxic effect neutralized using Propolis |
| Satar et al., 2015 [ | Oral exposure of adult female rats to methyl parathion, every day for 8 days. Followed by ovarian histological analysis | Structural alteration of the ovarian stroma with ⇗ apoptosis phenomena in follicles during chronic exposure. = Alteration of follicular capital |
| Kotil and Yön, 2015 [ | Oral exposure of adult rats to permethrine, 20 or 40 mg/kg/day for 14 days. Ovarian histological evaluation | Picnotic nucleus, condensed chromatin, alteration to the mitochondrial structure |
|
| ||
| Farr et al., 2006 [ | Epidemiological study on 8038 women who live and work in rural American | ⇗ median age at menopause by 3 months (OR = 0.87, CI 95% = 0.78–0.97) and at 5 months (OR = 0.77, CI 95% = 0.65–0.92) depending on the type of pesticides used |
Effects of tobacco on ovarian function
| References | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Matikainen et al., 2001 [ | Adult mouse exposure to a single intraperitoneal injection of 9,10-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) 50 mg/kg, a typical PAH | Activation of the aromatic hydrocarbon receptor (Ahr) driving Bax expression in oocytes, a pro-apoptosis factor |
| Jurisicova et al., 2007 [ | Exposure of mice to 2 PAHs (DMBA and BaP) 3 weeks before gestation and during lactation | ⇘ by one third of the ovarian follicle pool in F1 compared to unexposed offspring |
| Paixão et al., 2012 [ | Exposure of 10 mice to cigarette smoke 8 h/day, 7 days/week for 15 days. Euthanized at the end of exposure or 30 days after. | Alteration in follicular growth even after discontinuing the exposure. |
| Kilic et al., 2012 [ | Prospective randomized study, 25 pregnant rats exposed or unexposed to cigarette smoke. | significant ⇗ in DNA anomalies and the apoptotic index in the ovaries of exposed group |
| Gannon et al., 2012 [ | Mice exposed to tobacco smoke 5 day/week, for 4, 8, 9 or 17 weeks. | ⇘ ovary weight and number of primordial follicles. |
| Sobinoff et al., 2013 [ | Nasal exposure of mice to cigarette smoke. Ovarian toxicity analysis | ⇗ Depletion of primordial and antral follicular stock via, mechanisms of apoptosis and oxidative stress |
| Lim et al., 2013 [ | Mouse exposed by gavage to B[a]P at 0.2 or 10 mg/kg/d from the 7th to 16th gestational day. Effect of polymorphism of glutamate cysteine ligase | Prenatal exposure to BaP induced POI. Deletion of glutamate cysteine ligase increased the sensitivity of these ovarian effects |
| Camlin et al., 2016 [ | Nasal exposure of pregnant mice to cigarette smoke for 12 weeks. Analysis of F1 ovary and oocyte quality | Abnormal proliferation of neonatal somatic cells, |
|
| ||
| Progetto Menopausa Italia Study Group, 2003 [ | Cross-sectional study between 1997 and 1999. | No significant association between the risk of POI and smoking |
| Chang et al., 2007 [ | Study of risk factors in 137 menopausal patients < 40 years, 281 between 40 and 4 years, and 1318 between 45 and 60 years | Smoking ⇗ the idiopathic risk of POI: OR = 1.82 [1.03–3.23] |
| Kinney et al., 2007 [ | Effect of cigarette smoking on antral follicle count and FSH in 188 patients aged 22 to 49 years | Chronic cigarette smoking is associated with higher rates of FSH β = 0.21, 95% CI = 0.04, 0.39, but there is no significant difference on the AFC |
| Strohsnitter et al., 2008 [ | Epidemiological study on 4025 women. Association between prenatal exposure to cigarette smoking and age at menopause | An association between prenatal exposure and age at menopause for patients who have never smoked (HR = 1.38, 95% CI: 1.10, 1.74). Not found in patients who smoke (HR = 1.03, 95% CI: 0.81, 1.31) |
| Fleming et al., 2008 [ | Epidemiological study on 7596 women. Cotinine and FSH levels in the blood | Average age at menopause = 47.17 years for smokers compared to 48.59 years for non-smokers. |
| Freour et al., 2008 [ | Analysis of 111 patients treated for infertility | Significant ⇘ of AMH levels in patients who smoke 3.06 +/− 1.68 mg/L, compared to 3.86 +/− 1.92 |
| Lutterodt et al., 2009 [ | Ovary analysis of 29 fetuses in the 1st trimester. Ovary analysis, compared to maternal cigarette smoking exposure | ⇘ number of somatic cells ( |
| Ernst et al., 2012 [ | Prospective study on 965 pregnant women at 30 weeks amenorrhea. Evaluation of maternal cigarette smoking and study in 2008 on the fertility of their daughter ( | No significant association between in utero cigarette smoking exposure and the number of follicles |
| (Yasui et al., 2012) | Transversal study of a cohort of 24,152 Japanese nurses, research on factors associated with POI | Cigarette smoking is associated with an earlier age at menopause |
| Fraser et al., 2013 [ | Analysis of a cohort of 1399 adolescents between 1991 and 2008. Study on AMH levels depending on parental exposure to cigarette smoking | Paternal, and not maternal, cigarette smoking before and during pregnancy is associated with a decrease in AMH levels. |
| Caserta et al., 2013 [ | Analysis of the antral follicle count and FSH levels in 296 women, including 102 smokers | ⇘ Antral follicle count and ⇗ FSH in cigarette smokers correlated to the number of pack- years. |
| Fowler et al., 2014 [ | Analysis of 105 fetuses resulting from elective terminations in the 2nd trimester, 56 exposed, 49 unexposed. | Dysregulation of fetal ovarian signaling pathways |
| Butts et al., 2014 [ | Survival analysis for a cohort of 410 patients. Nucleotide polymorphism study | Risk of early menopause in cigarette smokers depends on genetic polymorphism. |
| Tawfik et al., 2015 [ | Cohort study of 1001 women aged 39 to 49 years. Evaluation of the association between exposure to cigarette smoke throughout the lifetime (prenatal, childhood, adulthood) and menopause status | Prenatal exposure and current cigarette smoking: 3 times more risk of early menopause (3.4; 95% CI, 1.1–10.3). Long-term exposure (>26 years) is associated to the age at menopause. |
| Peck et al., 2016 [ | Analysis of primordial follicle stock in 133 patients having underwent hysterectomy for a benign pathology. | No association between follicle count and cigarette smoking |
|
| ||
| Sun et al., 2012 [ | Analysis of 11 studies | Dichotomous studies: OR = 0.67 (CI 95%, 0.61 to 0.73, |
Effects of various pollutants on ovarian function
| References | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Phytoestrogens | ||
| Jefferson et al., 2007 [ | Oral or subcutaneous exposure of neonatal mice to genistein (0.5–50 mg/kg) | Early senescence of the ovarian function, multigenerational effect, ⇗ multi-oocyte follicles from defaults in primordial follicles assembly,ovulation rates and corpora lutea at low doses and anovulation at the highest dose with arguments for disruption of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis |
| Kim and Park, 2012 [ | Review of the effect of phytoestrogens on sexual function | Disruption of ovarian function and folliculogenesis. No specification on the consequences on the ovarian reserve |
| Wang et al., 2014 [ | Rats orally exposed to 50, 100 or 200 mg/kg of soy isoflavones from weaning to sexual maturity and evaluation of the ovarian reserve | Alteration of follicular development by inducing apoptosis of granulosa cells via Fas-mediated and Bcl2/Bax-mediated apoptotic pathways. |
| PAH | ||
| Hombach-Klonisch et al., 2005 [ | Review of the PAHs | Disrupts ovarian function by modulating AhR transcription |
| Dioxins | ||
| Eskenazi et al., 2005 [ | Epidemiological study conducted for 20 years on a city in Italy contaminated with TCDD following an industrial explosion. 616 patients included, impact of TCDD serum levels on age at menopause | ⇗ in 6% nonsignificant risk of menopause occurring earlier with high serum concentrations of TCDD. But the trend for early menopause in the first four quintiles is statistically significant |
| Shi et al., 2007 [ | Chronic exposure at low doses (0, 1, 5, 50 or 200 ng/kg/week) in female rats to TCDD from in utero life until ovarian senescence | Doses from 50 to 200 ng/kg/week: |
| PCB | ||
| Shirota et al., 2006 [ | Oral exposure in female rats to PCB 126 at 0, 1 or 3 μg/kg/day for 2 weeks before mating until birth | ⇘ ovary weight ⇗ antral follicular atresia in F1 at doses of 3 μg/kg/d. Activation of the AhR system. |
| Pocar et al., 2012 [ | Exposure of mice to a mixture of PCB 0, 1, 10 or 100 mg/kg/day during pregnancy and lactation | PCB level significantly ⇗ in exposed newborns compared to the controls. |
| Perfluorinated compounds | ||
| Knox et al., 2011 [ | Cross-sectional study on 25,957 women | Start of menopause was earlier by several months in exposed patients |
| Taylor et al., 2014 [ | Cross-sectional study of the NHANES cohort, 3011 women were studied for the association between exposure to perfluorinated compounds and the age at menopause onset | Women with elevated perfluorinated compound serum levels were younger at menopause than women with lower levels. |
| Alcohol | ||
| Peck et al., 2016 [ | Analysis of primordial follicle stock in 133 patients having underwent hysterectomy. Evaluation of behavioral habits using a questionnaire | Light to moderate alcohol consumption is associated with a higher follicle count. |
| Flame retardants | ||
| Lefèvre et al., 2016 [ | Exposure of pregnant rats to bromine flame retardants for 2 to 3 weeks | ⇗ 50% in the number of antral and pre-antral follicles = Alteration of folliculogenesis |
| HMB = 2-hydroxy-4methoxybenzone, anti-UV protector | ||
| Nakamura et al., 2015 [ | Rats exposed to different doses of HMB (7–8 per group) from the 6th gestational day until the 23rd postnatal day. Effects on offspring | Delayed follicular development in the group receiving the highest dose. Exposure at less than 10,000 ppm of HMB does not seem to be associated with adverse effects on the reproductive system |
| Diesel | ||
| Ogliari et al., 2013 [ | Pregnant mice exposed daily to diesel products | ⇘ Number of follicles, ⇘ ovarian reserve |
| 2-Bromopropane | ||
| Boekelheide et al., 2004 [ | American review conducted in the context of the National Toxicology Program, reviewing data from five human studies | Four studies in favor of an excess risk of POI and one study without excess risk but lacks strength |
Fig. 3The major ways used by environmental pollutants to induce defaults in folliculogenesis leading to POI. Environmental pollutants can act through several mechanisms. • actions as endocrine disruptors as ligands to nuclear estrogen receptors (ER, salmon arrows) and aryl hydrocarbon receptors (AhR, blue arrows). Once linked to AhR, they can bind to AhR nuclear translocator (ARNT) to interfere with xenobiotoc responsive elements (XRE) from promotors and affect gene expression, notably promoting pro-apoptotic genes and inhibiting anti-apopototic genes. • creation of an imbalance between oxydative defenses and oxydative stress favoring apoptosis at different follicular stages (green arrows). • Modification of epigenetic marks such as DNA methylation (●) or histones post-traductional modifications (▸, , ●) affecting the transcriptional state of chromatin and therefore gene expression. • binding to several membrane receptors suchs as membrane bound ER (mER) or receptor protein tyrosine kinases (RPTK) activating the PI3 Kinase pathway are suspected (grey dotted arrows)