| Literature DB >> 33042007 |
Elikanah Olusayo Adegoke1, Md Saidur Rahman1, Myung-Geol Pang1.
Abstract
Male reproductive function and health are largely dependent on the testes, which are strictly regulated by their major cell components, i. e., Sertoli, Leydig, and germ cells. Sertoli cells perform a crucial phagocytic function in addition to supporting the development of germ cells. Leydig cells produce hormones essential for male reproductive function, and germ cell quality is a key parameter for male fertility assessment. However, these cells have been identified as primary targets of endocrine disruptors, including bisphenols. Bisphenols are a category of man-made organic chemicals used to manufacture plastics, epoxy resins, and personal care products such as lipsticks, face makeup, and nail lacquers. Despite long-term uncertainty regarding their safety, bisphenols are still being used worldwide, especially bisphenol A. While considerable attention has been paid to the effects of bisphenols on health, current bisphenol-related reproductive health cases indicate that greater attention should be given to these chemicals. Bisphenols, especially bisphenol A, F, and S, have been reported to elicit various effects on testicular cells, including apoptosis, DNA damage, disruption of intercommunication among cells, mitochondrial damage, disruption of tight junctions, and arrest of proliferation, which threaten male reproductive health. In addition, bisphenols are xenoestrogens, which alter organs and cells functions via agonistic or antagonistic interplay with hormone receptors. In this review, we provide in utero, in vivo, and in vitro evidence that currently available brands of bisphenols impair male reproductive health through their action on testicular cells.Entities:
Keywords: Leydig cell; Sertoli cell; apoptosis; bisphenol; germ cell; tight junction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33042007 PMCID: PMC7518410 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Schematic representation of the action mechanism of bisphenols on testicular cells.
Effects of Bisphenols on Leydig cells.
| BPA | 2.4 μg/kg/day | Long-Evans rat | Decreased testosterone production (1.62 ± 0.16 ng/ml; vs. control, 2.52 ± 0.21) | ( |
| Decreased androgen biosynthesis | ||||
| Suppression of CYP17 gene expression | ||||
| Inhibition of testicular steroidogenesis | ||||
| BPA | 0.01 | 90-day old Rat adult Leydig cell | Decreased testosterone biosynthesis by 25% | ( |
| BPA | 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml | TM3 cell line | Decreased testosterone secretion by 30.4, 69.2, 79.5 % for 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml, respectively | ( |
| Decreased viability | ||||
| BPB | 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml | TM3 cell line | Decreased testosterone secretion by 41, 76.1, and 91% for 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml, respectively | ( |
| BPS | 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml | TM3 cell line | Decreased testosterone secretion by 8.8, 7, and 19.4% for 10, 25, and 50 μg/ml, respectively | ( |
| BPF | 25 and 50 μg/ml | TM3 cell line | Decreased testosterone secretion by 3.8 and 13.8% for 25 and 50 μg/ml, respectively | ( |
| BPA | 10−8 M | Human (6.5–10.5 gestational weeks) testicular explant | Decreased testosterone by 20% compared to control | ( |
| Reduced expression of INSL3 by 20% compared to control | ||||
| BPA | 10−5 M | Wistar rat (14.5 dpc) testicular explant | Decreased testosterone by approximately 50 % on 3rd day of culture | ( |
| Reduced expression of INSL3 by approximately 20% | ||||
| BPA | 10−5 M | Sprague-Dawley Rat (14.5 dpc) testicular explants | Inhibition of testosterone by 10−5M BPA diluted in DMSO at all periods 24 h: 53%; 48 h: 40%; 72 h: 39%, | ( |
| Suppressed INSL3 by 76% | ||||
| BPA | 10−5 M | Man (7–12 gestational week) testicular explants | Inhibition of testosterone by 10−5 BPA diluted in DMSO by 28% | ( |
| BPA | 1, 10, and 100 μM | TM3 cell line | Decreased testosterone production by 22%, 28%, and 39%, for 1, 10, and 100 μM, respectively, when compared to the negative control | ( |
| Decreased cell viability | ||||
| Decreased cell growth | ||||
| Decreased metabolically active mitochondria | ||||
| Alteration of mitochondrial membrane potential | ||||
| BPA, BPS, and BPF | 10,000 nmol/L | Mice (12.5 dpc) | Reduced INSL3 expression | ( |
| Reduced expression of testosterone biosynthesis related genes ( | ||||
| BPA, BPS, and BPF | 10 nmol/L | Human (6.3–11.1 gestational weeks) | Decreased basal testosterone secretion | ( |
| BPA and BPB | 10−9-10−5 M | Human (46.7 ± 4.65) testicular explant | Inhibition of testosterone production (BPA, 28.7 and 39.2 % at 24 and 48 h, respectively) (BPB, 17 and 47% at 24 and 48 h, respectively. | ( |
| BPAF | 200 mg/kg/day | 7 weeks Sprague–Dawley rat | Reduction of testosterone production by 90.6% compared to control | ( |
| Altered testosterone biosynthesis | ||||
| BPA | 100 and 200 mg/kg/day | Wistar/ST rat | Reduced plasma and testicular testosterone production | ( |
| Reduced number of Leydig cell | ||||
| BPA | 4, 40, and 400 mg/kg | Sprague–Dawley rats (Gestational day 21) | Disruption of fetal Leydig cell number, proliferation and distribution | ( |
| Downregulation of Leydig cell genes | ||||
| Decreased expression of INSL3 |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the effect of Bisphenols on Leydig cells.
Effects of bisphenols on Sertoli cells.
| BPA | 50 mg/kg (Rats) | Sprague–Dawley rats and Wistar rats (20 day old); | Disruption of the blood-testis barrier integrity | ( |
| BPA | 200 μM (Sertoli cell) | Sertoli cells (20-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats) | Perturbation of Sertoli cell tight junction permeability barrier | ( |
| Activation of ERK1/2 in the cell | ||||
| Downregulation of basal ectoplasmic specialization and gap junction at the blood-testis barrier | ||||
| BPA | 150–200 μM | 18-day-old Wistar rats Sertoli cell | Decreased cell viability | ( |
| Induction of membrane blebs, cell rounding, cytoskeletal collapse, chromatin condensation, and DNA fragmentation | ||||
| Expression of caspase-3 | ||||
| Disorganization of the actin cytoskeleton | ||||
| Decreased hormone (transferrin) secretion | ||||
| BPA | 200 μM | Mouse Sertoli TTE3 cells | Induction of cellular damage and apoptosis | ( |
| Induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress | ||||
| Endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ homeostasis blockage | ||||
| BPA | 20 and 200 μg/kg | ICR mice (3 months old) | Impairment of ectoplasmic specialization between the Sertoli cell and spermatids | ( |
| Wistar rat (4 months) | Incomplete, redundant ectopic specialization | |||
| BPA | 200 μM | Rat and SerW3 Sertoli cell line | Perturbation of the Sertoli cell tight junction permeability barrier function | ( |
| Downregulation of blood-testis barrier proteins | ||||
| Redistribution of blood-testis barrier-associated proteins | ||||
| Alteration of the distribution of integral membrane proteins and their peripheral adaptors | ||||
| BPA | 45 μM | SerW3 Sertoli cells | Alterations of Sertoli cell functions | ( |
| Metabolic, endocrine and/or paracrine dysfunctions | ||||
| BPA | 50 mg/kg | ICR mice (6 weeks) | Downregulation of Sertoli cell-related genes ( | ( |
| BPA | 2.4 μg/kg/day | Neonatal Holtzman rat | Impairment of fertility | ( |
| Perturbations tight junctions and decreased expression of junctional proteins | ||||
| BPA | 40 and 200 μM | Human Sertoli cell (12, 23, and 36-year old) | Truncation and depolymerization of actin | ( |
| Microfilaments | ||||
| Disorganization of F-actin | ||||
| Changes in the localization and distribution of F-actin regulatory proteins in Sertoli cell epithelia | ||||
| Retraction of actin microfilaments | ||||
| BPA | 4, 40, and 400 mg/kg | Sprague–Dawley rat | Downregulation of Sertoli cell genes | ( |
Figure 3Schematic description of the effects of bisphenols on Sertoli cells and male reproductive health.
Effect of bisphenols on germ cells.
| BPA | 100 μM | ICR mice | Alteration of motility characteristics, acrosome reaction, fertilization, and early embryonic development | ( |
| Downregulation of fertility-related proteins | ||||
| Altered capacitation status | ||||
| BPA | 10 and 100 μM | Germ cell (ICR mice) | Induction of apoptosis in cultured spermatogonial stem cells | ( |
| Inhibition of testicular germ cell proliferation | ||||
| Alteration of stemness properties of spermatogonial stem cells | ||||
| Induction of meiotic abnormalities in spermatogonial stem cells | ||||
| Induction of proteome alterations in germ cells | ||||
| BPA | 50, 100, and 200 mg/kg/day | Wistar male rats (aged 28 days) | Sperm abnormality | ( |
| Decreased sperm density and survival rate | ||||
| BPA | 5.0 mg/kgbw | Holtzman rat (8 weeks) | Increased sperm DNA damage | ( |
| Decreased motility | ||||
| Decreased sperm count | ||||
| BPA | 2.4 μg/pup | Holtzman rat | Induction of hypomethylation | ( |
| BPA | 30 mg/kg/day | Kunming mice (8 weeks) | Induction of apoptosis in germ cells | ( |
| BPA, BPE, and BPS | 0.5, 20, or 50 μg/kg/day | CD-1 mice (Post-natal day 12 and 16) | Disrupted progression of germ cell development | ( |
| Decreased sperm motility | ||||
| Induction of oxidative stress and apoptosis of germ cells | ||||
| Spermatogenic defect | ||||
| BPA (10 mg/kgbw) | 50 or 10 mg/kgbw | CD-1 mice (5–6 weeks) | Meiotic errors during spermatogenesis | ( |
| Reduced sperm production and quality | ||||
| Disrupted male germ cell development | ||||
| BPE (50 μg/kgbw) | Induction of germ cell apoptosis and DNA breaks in pachytene spermatocytes | |||
| BPS (10 mg/kgbw | Delayed cycle in germ cell development | |||
| BPA, BPB, BPF, and BPS | 50 μg/L | Rat (22 day old) | Reduced sperm motility | ( |
| Reduced daily sperm production | ||||
| Reduced number of epididymal sperm | ||||
| BPA | 2 and 20 mg/kgbw | Wistar rat | Abnormalities in sperm morphology | ( |
| Decreased epididymal sperm counts and motility | ||||
| Induction of oxidative stress in epididymal sperm | ||||
| BPA | 50 mg/kg/day) | FXRα−1− mice | Reduced number of germ cells | ( |
| BPS | 50 μg/L | Sprague Dawley rats (70–80 days) | Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) | ( |
| Induction of apoptosis | ||||
| Reduced number of germ cells | ||||
| BPA | 1, 5, and 100 mg/kgbw | Sprague Dawley rat (Postnatal day 21) | Undifferentiated germ cells | ( |
| Empty epididymal tubules | ||||
| Sloughing of germ cells | ||||
| Altered germ cell maturity | ||||
| BPA | 2 mg/kgbw | Chicken (white leghorn) | Constrained spermatogenesis | ( |
| BPA | 5 mg/kg/day | ICR mice (4 weeks) | Lower seminiferous tubule and mature spermatids | ( |
| Disruption of spermatogenesis | ||||
| BPA | 1.2 and 2.4 μg/kg/day | Holtzman mice (Postnatal day 75) | Increased time taken for copulation | ( |
| Degeneration of the germ cell | ||||
| Sertoli cell only syndrome | ||||
| Sloughing of germ cells | ||||
| BPA | 100 μM | ICR mice | Decreased number of motile sperm | ( |
| Altered spermatozoa mitochondria activities | ||||
| BPA | 50 mg/kg bw/day) | ICR mice (8 weeks old) | Alteration of capacitated spermatozoa function and the proteomic profile | ( |
| Compromised fertilization capabilities of Spermatozoa |
Figure 4Schematic description of the effects of bisphenols on germ cell and male fertility.