Sommaire
de recherche sur la pertubation endocrinienne en 2007
Akbas, G.E., X. Fei & H.S. Taylor.
(2007). Regulation of HOXA10 expression by phytoestrogens. American
Journal of Physiology, Endocrinology and Metabolism 292, E435-E442. PMID:
16985261
Translated Title:
Plant based estrogens regulate expression of reproductive gene.
Conclusions: In utero exposure
to plant estrogens unlikely to result in developmental anomalies
due to modification of HOXA10 expression, however, this may be
a mechanism by which adult exposure to genistein alters fertility.
Benninghoff, A.D. (2007). Toxicoproteomics--the
next step in the evolution of environmental biomarkers. Toxicological
Sciences: An Official Journal of the Society of Toxicology
95, 1-4. PMID:
17209232
Translated Title: New
technique in biomonitoring called toxicoproteomics holds promise
for improving exposure assessment.
Conclusions: Advances
in biomonitoring have led to methods which simultaneously reflect
chemical exposure and biological effect. Toxicoproteomics is
one such technique in which protein expression profiles are used
to indicate xenoestrogen exposure. Although this technique holds
promise for improved risk assessment, limitations such as varying
protein expression within species and similar methods of action
for various pollutants remain.
Birrell, S.N., L.M. Butler, J.M. Harris, G.
Buchanan & W.D. Tilley. (2007). Disruption of androgen receptor
signaling by synthetic progestins may increase risk of developing
breast cancer. The FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the Federation
of American Societies for Experimental Biology. EPub. PMID:
17413000
Translated Title: Exposure
to synthetic progestins may increase risk of breast cancer.
Conclusions: By binding to the androgen
receptor, synthetic progestins may be negating the protective
effects of androgen signaling in the breast and may account for
recent increases in breast cancer.
Brian, J.V., C.A. Harris, M. Scholze, A. Kortenkamp,
P. Booy, M. Lamoree, et al. (2007). Evidence of estrogenic
mixture effects on the reproductive performance of fish. Environmental
Science & Technology 41, 337-344. PMID:
17265968
Translated Title: Mixtures
of endocrine disrupting chemicals affects reproduction in fish.
Conclusions: Mixtures of chemicals
may have adverse health outcomes even when each component is
present below the threshold of detectable effects.
Canesi, L., L.C. Lorusso, C. Ciacci, M. Betti,
M. Rocchi, G. Pojana, et al. (2007). Immunomodulation of Mytilus
hemocytes by individual estrogenic chemicals and environmentally
relevant mixtures of estrogens: in vitro and in vivo studies. Aquatic
Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) 81, 36-44. PMID:
17126923
Translated Title: Individual
and mixtures of estrogenic chemicals affect immune system of mollusk
species.
Conclusions: Effects of chemical mixtures
were observed on mollusk species, Mytilus, immune parameters
both in vitro and in vivo, indicating that these parameters may
be used to evaluate estrogenic potential of environmental samples.
Carbone, P., F. Giordano, F. Nori, A. Mantovani,
D. Taruscio, L. Lauria, et al. (2007). The possible role
of endocrine disrupting chemicals in the aetiology of cryptorchidism
and hypospadias: a population-based case-control study in rural Sicily.
International Journal of Andrology 30, 3-13. PMID:
16824044
Translated Title: Study
in rural Sicily reveals only possible association between endocrine
related chemicals and cryptorchidism and hypospadias. Conclusions: Study
reveals very little support for the hypothesis linking cryptorchidism
and hypospadias with agricultural exposures as authors did not
find a statistically significant increase in risk among parents
directly involved in this type of work. A non-statistically significant
increase in risk was found for cyrptochidism in mothers employed
in agricultural work (OR = 2.97, 95% CI = 0.77-11.47).
Carreno, J., A. Rivas, A. Granada, M. Jose Lopez-Espinosa,
M. Mariscal, N. Olea, et al. (2007). Exposure of young men
to organochlorine pesticides in Southern Spain. Environmental Research
103, 55-61. PMID:
16889768
Translated Title: Exposure
of young men to pesticides in Southern Spain.
Conclusions: By measuring and comparing
levels of 14 organochlorine pesticides (ex: DDT metabolites)
in the blood of 220 young males in Southern Spain, it was determined
that men of reproductive age are exposed to these chemicals,
and further study is warranted to determine the potential health
effects of such exposures.
Ceccarelli, I., D. Della Seta, P. Fiorenzani, F. Farabollini & A.M.
Aloisi. (2007). Estrogenic chemicals at puberty change ERalpha in the
hypothalamus of male and female rats. Neurotoxicology and Teratology
29, 108-115. PMID:
17157476
Translated Title: Exposures
to estrogenic chemicals during puberty affects receptors in the rat
brain.
Conclusions: Results of study indicate
that estrogenic chemicals have the ability to change the reproductive
neural circuits of male and female rats during puberty.
Charles, G.D., C. Gennings, B. Tornesi, H.L. Kan,
T.R. Zacharewski, B. Bhaskar Gollapudi, et al. (2007). Analysis
of the interaction of phytoestrogens and synthetic chemicals: an in
vitro/in vivo comparison. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 218,
280-288. PMID:
17222880
Translated Title: Analysis
of interactions between plant estrogens and synthetic chemicals.
Conclusions: Study reveals that, in
vitro, the interactions between high-doses of synthetic chemicals
and plant chemicals were greater than additive, but less than
additive when plant estrogens were excluded from the mixture.
In vivo, the results were consistent with additivity. The authors
therefore conclude that chemical mixture toxicity is only likely
to be a concern when the components approach individual response
thresholds.
Clewell, R.A., E.A. Merrill, J.M. Gearhart, P.J. Robinson,
T.R. Sterner, D.R. Mattie, et al. (2007). Perchlorate and
radioiodide kinetics across life stages in the human: using PBPK models
to predict dosimetry and thyroid inhibition and sensitive subpopulations
based on developmental stage. Journal of Toxicology and Environmental
Health Part A 70, 408-428. PMID:
17454566
Translated Title: Effects
of drinking water contaminant on thyroid iodide uptake across various
human life stages.
Conclusions: Predictive modeling indicated
that pregnant women, the fetus and lactating women, had higher
blood concentrations of the drinking water contaminant, perchlorate,
and in turn higher inhibition of thyroid iodide intake, than
non-pregnant women or older children. However, the extent of
the inhibition was not significant at the USEPA reference dose.
Courant, F., J.P. Antignac, D. Maume, F. Monteau,
A.M. Andersson, N. Skakkebaek, et al. (2007). Exposure assessment
of prepubertal children to steroid endocrine disrupters 1. Analytical
strategy for estrogens measurement in plasma at ultra-trace level.
Analytica Chimica Acta 586, 105-114. PMID:
17386701
Translated Title: New strategy
developed for assessing low-level exposure to steroid endocrine disruptors
in young children.
Conclusions: By developing a new ultra-sensitive
method to detect trace measurements of steroid endocrine disruptors,
the authors determined that endogenous levels of estradiol were
very low in prepubertal children and thus, exogenous estrogens
will constitute a higher proportion of sex hormone activity in
children.
Cravedi, J.P., D. Zalko, J.F. Savouret, A. Menuet & B.
Jegou. (2007). The concept of endocrine disruption and human health.
Medicine Sciences: M/S 23, 198-204. PMID:
17291431
Translated Title: The concept
of endocrine disruption and human health.
Conclusions: Authors review current
literature on endocrine disruptors and human health with the
aim of describing the present of knowledge surrounding this topic.
Dang, V.H., K.C. Choi, S.H. Hyun & E.B. Jeung.
(2007). Analysis of gene expression profiles in the offspring of rats
following maternal exposure to xenoestrogens. Reproductive Toxicology
(Elmsford, N.Y.) 23, 42-54. PMID:
17011747.
Translated Title: Are genes
expressed differently in the offspring of rats exposed to foreign
estrogens?
Conclusions: Exposure in the womb to
4-tert-octyphenol (OP) or diethylstillbesterol (DES) may cause
temporal changes in gene expression in the uteri of both mothers
and offspring.
Ding, L., M.B. Murphy, Y. He, Y. Xu, L.W. Yeung, J.
Wang, et al. (2007). Effects of brominated flame retardants
and brominated dioxins on steroidogenesis in H295R human adrenocortical
carcinoma cell line. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry / SETAC
26, 764-772. PMID:
17447562.
Translated Title: Effects
of brominated flame retardants and brominated dioxins on steroid
production.
Conclusions: Bromophenol, bromobiphenyls,
and bromodibenzo-p-dioxins/furans are capable of altering steroid
production via changes in gene expression. This may be one mechanism
by which the endocrine system is disrupted by these pollutants.
Janer, G. & C. Porte. (2007). Sex steroids and
potential mechanisms of non-genomic endocrine disruption in invertebrates.
Ecotoxicology (London, England) 16, 145-160. PMID:
17219086
Translated Title: Methods
of endocrine disruption in invertebrates excluding alteration of
gene expression.
Conclusions: This article presents
a review on the presence and metabolism of sex steroids in invertebrates
as well as potential mechanisms for endocrine disruption in this
group of organisms.
Jefferson, W.N., E. Padilla-Banks & R.R. Newbold.
(2007). Disruption of the female reproductive system by the phytoestrogen
genistein. Reproductive Toxicology (Elmsford, N.Y.) 23, 308-316. PMID:
17250991.
Translated Title: Plant
estrogen, genistein, shown to disrupt female reproductive system.
Conclusions: Exposure to genistein
in the womb at environmentally relevant doses was shown to adversely
affect reproduction in adulthood.
Jenkins, S., C. Rowell, J. Wang & C.A. Lamartiniere.
(2007). Prenatal TCDD exposure predisposes for mammary cancer in rats.
Reproductive Toxicology (Elmsford, N.Y.) 23, 391-396. PMID:
17157473
Translated Title: Exposure
to dioxin during prenatal development increases susceptibility to
mammary cancer in rats.
Conclusions: Seven proteins were shown
to be differentially regulated from 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
exposure in the womb. It is believed that these alterations to
the mammary proteome can in turn alter susceptibility to mammary
cancer later in life.
Jimenez, B., G. Mori, M.A. Concejero, R. Merino, S.
Casini & M.C. Fossi. (2007). Vitellogenin and zona radiata proteins
as biomarkers of endocrine disruption in peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus).
Chemosphere 67, S375-S378. PMID:
17223181.
Translated Title: Proteins
found to be sensitive biomarker of endocrine disruption in falcon
species.
Conclusions: Induction of Vtg and Zrp
was shown to be an effective tool for detecting exposure to endocrine
disrupting chemicals. As well, since increased Vtg and Zrp was
detected in the male specimen, there may be cause for concern
over the reproductive health of this species.
Kim, H.H., D.H. Kwak, J.M. Yon, I.J. Baek, S.R. Lee,
J.E. Lee, et al. (2007). Differential Expression of 3beta-Hydroxysteroid
Dehydrogenase mRNA in Rat Testes Exposed to Endocrine Disruptors. The
Journal of Reproduction and Development 53, 465-471. PMID:
17229994
Translated Title: mRNA
expression altered in rat testes exposed to endocrine disruptors.
Conclusions: The investigators found
that testosterone at low doses increased the expression of 3beta-hydroxysteroid
dehydrogenase mRNA (3beta-HSD), but down regulated expression
at high doses. Other substances including ketoconazole, diethylhexyl
phthalate, nonylphenol, octyphenol and diethylstilbersterol all
downregulated 3beta-HSD, whereas flutamine increased expression.
Overall the authors found that these pollutants have the ability
to alter androgen biosynthesis in the testes.
Kinnberg, K., H. Holbech, G.I. Petersen & P. Bjerregaard.
(2007). Effects of the fungicide prochloraz on the sexual development
of zebrafish (Danio rerio). Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology.Toxicology & Pharmacology
: CBP 145, 165-170. PMID:
17229592
Translated Title: Exposure
to fungicide affects sexual development of zebrafish.
Conclusions: The authors found that
when zebrafish were exposed to 202 microg/L of prochloraz an
increased proportion of males as well as an increased incidence
of intersex and altered stages of gonads was observed. At the
same exposure level, a decrease in vitellogenin was observed
for both males and females however, at lower exposures (16 and
64 microg/L) an increase in vitellogenin was observed in the
males. This study provides support for the Fish Sexual Development
Test (FSDT).
Lelli, S.M., N.R. Ceballos, M.B. Mazzetti, C.A. Aldonatti & San
Martin de Viale,L.C. (2007). Hexachlorobenzene as hormonal disruptor--studies
about glucocorticoids: their hepatic receptors, adrenal synthesis and
plasma levels in relation to impaired gluconeogenesis. Biochemical
Pharmacology 73, 873-879. PMID:
17182006
Translated Title: An examination
of hexachlorobenzene’s role as a hormonal disruptor and its
potential to impair glucose synthesis.
Conclusions: Authors determined that
hexachorobenzene disrupts a group of steroid hormones called
glucocorticoids which are characterized by their ability to bind
to bind with the cortisol receptor. They also observed disruption
of hepatic receptors. Overall, they determined that this pollutant
could contribute to a negative effect on glucose synthesis through
the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate-carboxykinase (PEPCK) regulation.
Lerner, D.T., B.T. Bjornsson & S.D. McCormick.
(2007). Effects of aqueous exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (Aroclor
1254) on physiology and behavior of smolt development of Atlantic salmon.
Aquatic Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) 81, 329-336. PMID:
17275933
Translated Title: Effects
of PCB (Aroclor 1254) on salmon development.
Conclusions: Authors determined that
the effects of exposure to Aroclor 1254 may vary according to
developmental stage.
Liu, B., G. Lin, E. Willingham, H. Ning, C.S. Lin,
T. Lue, et al. (2007). Estradiol upregulates activating transcription
factor 3, a candidate gene in the etiology of hypospadias. Pediatric
and Developmental Pathology: The Official Journal of the Society for
Pediatric Pathology and the Paediatric Pathology Society, 1. PMID:
17378634
Translated Title: Estradiol
effects gene that may play a role in the development of hypospadias.
Conclusions: Ethinyl estradiol upregulates
activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) in fibroblasts in
vitro and is likely involved in the development of hypospadias.
Lo, S., I. King, A. Allera & D. Klingmuller. (2007).
Effects of various pesticides on human 5alpha-reductase activity in
prostate and LNCaP cells. Toxicology in Vitro: An International Journal
Published in Association with BIBRA 21, 502-508. PMID:
17218080.
Translated Title: Effects
of pesticides on enzyme involved in normal masculinization.
Conclusions: Authors reported on the
inhibitory effects/or lack thereof of ten pesticides on human
5 alpha-reductase activity in two different test systems.
Maerkel, K., S. Durrer, M. Henseler, M. Schlumpf & W.
Lichtensteiger. (2007). Sexually dimorphic gene regulation in brain
as a target for endocrine disrupters: developmental exposure of rats
to 4-methylbenzylidene camphor. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology
218, 152-165. PMID:
17188730
Translated Title: Gene
that regulates the systematic difference in form between sexes of
the same species in brain, studied as a target for endocrine disruptors
in rats.
Conclusions: Authors found sex and
region specific alterations in the regulation of estrogen target
genes in the brain, that show effect patterns in baseline and
E2 induced gene expression that were different from those different
in the uterus and prostate.
Martin, O.V., J.N. Lester, N. Voulvoulis & A.R.
Boobis. (2007). Human health and endocrine disruption: a simple multi-criteria
framework for the qualitative assessment of endpoint-specific risks
in a context of scientific uncertainty. Toxicological Sciences: An
Official Journal of the Society of Toxicology. EPub. PMID:
17255114
Translated Title: Human
health and endocrine disruption: a framework for assessing endpoint-specific
risks when much still remains unknown.
Conclusions: The authors updated
the evidence from the IPCS Global Assessment of the State-of-Science
on Endocrine Disruptors through applying three criterion relevant
to the Precautionary Principle – Incidence Trends, Association
and Consequence. The current degree of knowledge was then ranked
according to ignorance, uncertainty, and risk.
Matthiessen, P. & I. Johnson. (2007). Implications
of research on endocrine disruption for the environmental risk assessment,
regulation and monitoring of chemicals in the European Union. Environmental
Pollution (Barking, Essex: 1987) 146, 9-18. PMID:
16996184
Translated Title: Endocrine
disruption: environmental risk assessment, chemical regulation and
monitoring.
Conclusions: Research on endocrine
disruption in wildlife has indicated a number of flaws in regulating
and monitoring chemicals. Although there is no one solution exists
in remedying these flaws, the authors recommend that the guiding
philosophy should combine chemical and biological solutions to
provide: 1) an integrated view of the long-term effects with
possibility of multiple causes 2) a predictive view of ecosystem
damage and 3) a diagnostic view of causative chemicals.
Merlet, J., C. Racine, E. Moreau, S.G. Moreno & R.
Habert. (2007). Male fetal germ cells are targets for androgens that
physiologically inhibit their proliferation. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104, 3615-3620. PMID:
17360691
Translated Title: Cells
involved in reproduction are targets for androgens in the developing
male fetus.
Conclusions: The authors determined
that the germ cells are targets for androgens, and that pathways
in the fetal testis during embryonic development are highly sensitive
to anti-androgenic endocrine disruption.
Murado, M.A. & J.A. Vazquez. (2007). The notion
of hormesis and the dose-response theory: a unified approach. Journal
of Theoretical Biology 244, 489-499. PMID:
17049945
Translated Title: What to do when the
dose-response theory doesn’t work.
Conclusions: The problem of hormesis-
that is, when a toxic substance acts like a stimulant in small
doses but is an inhibitor at large doses- has been problematic
when dealing with traditional dose response theory. To deal with
this issue, the authors propose a modification to the dose response
theory that allows for biphasic responses.
Nebesio, T.D. & E.A. Eugster. (2007). Current concepts
in normal and abnormal puberty. Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent
Health Care 37, 50-72. PMID:
17223057
Translated
Title: A review of the literature on puberty.
Conclusions: This article reviews current concepts in
puberty ranging from secular trends and the timing of puberty
to variants of precocious puberty as well as pathological precocious
puberty, other disorders and delayed puberty.
Newbold, R.R., E. Padilla-Banks, R.J. Snyder, T.M.
Phillips & W.N. Jefferson. (2007). Developmental exposure to endocrine
disruptors and the obesity epidemic. Reproductive Toxicology (Elmsford,
N.Y.) 23, 290-296. PMID:
17321108.
Translated Title: The
relation between endocrine disruptors and obesity.
Conclusions: Authors present a review
of the literature that proposes an association of exposure to
environmental endocrine disrupting chemicals with the development
of obesity. They also describe an animal model of developmental
exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES) to study mechanisms involved
in programming an organism for obesity.
Olea, N. & M. Fernandez. (2007). Endocrine disruption.
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 61, 372-373. PMID:
17435199.
Translated Title: A review
of the literature on endocrine disruption.
Conclusions: The authors believe that
current knowledge on endocrine disruption is limited by uncertainties
surrounding chronic, low-level and early life exposures. They
also identify several knowledge gaps where further research is
necessary in order to advance the science.
Price, T.M., S.K. Murphy & E.V. Younglai. (2007).
Perspectives: the possible influence of assisted reproductive technologies
on transgenerational reproductive effects of environmental endocrine
disruptors. Toxicological Sciences: An Official Journal of the Society
of Toxicology 96, 218-226. PMID:
17190972
Translated Title: Reproductive
technologies may be propagating effects of environmental endocrine
disruptors through generations
Conclusions: The authors
review the hypothesis that assisted reproductive technologies
are allowing effects of endocrine disruptors to be propagated
from individuals that would otherwise be sterile, thus by-passing
barriers put in place by natural selection.
Shi, Z., K.E. Valdez, A.Y. Ting, A. Franczak, S.L.
Gum & B.K. Petroff. (2007). Ovarian endocrine disruption underlies
premature reproductive senescence following environmentally relevant
chronic exposure to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonist 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.
Biology of Reproduction 76, 198-202. PMID:
17050859
Translated Title: Chronic
exposure to dioxin leads to ovarian endocrine disruption – one
mechanism which may underlie premature loss of function in the reproductive
system.
Conclusions: No changes in FSH, LH
and progesterone profiles were observed after chronic exposure
to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, and the loss of reproductive
cyclicity was not accompanied by a decreased responsiveness to
GnRH. Ovarian endocrine disruption was observed to be the primary
functional change preceding premature reproductive senescence.
Skinner, M.K. (2007). Endocrine disruptors and epigenetic
transgenerational disease etiology. Pediatric Research 61, 48R-50R. PMID:
17413841
Translated Title: Endocrine
disruptors and genetic alterations.
Conclusions: Prenatal
exposures to endocrine disruptors during gonadal sex determination
may reprogram male germ-line cells and promote adult-onset disease
which may be passed down throughout generations.
Smith, C.C. & H.S. Taylor. (2007). Xenoestrogen
exposure imprints expression of genes (Hoxa10) required for normal
uterine development. The FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 21, 239-246. PMID:
17093138
Translated Title: Exposure
to foreign estrogens alters expression of gene required for normal
uterine development.
Conclusions: Prenatal exposure to Bisphenol
A alters the reproductive tract by imprinting essential developmental
regulatory genes such as HOXA10 ERE and ARE.
Sun, H., X.L. Xu, L.C. Xu, L. Song, X. Hong, J.F.
Chen, et al. (2007). Antiandrogenic activity of pyrethroid
pesticides and their metabolite in reporter gene assay. Chemosphere
66, 474-479. PMID:
16857237
Translated Title: Pesticides
suppress androgenic activity in vitro.
Conclusions: Using three pyrethroid
pesticides (fenvalerate, cypermethrin, permethrin) and their
metabolite, along with a human androgen receptor mediated luciferase
reporter gene assay, the authors demonstrated that all chemicals
analyzed suppressed luciferase expression but none showed androgenic
activity.
Uzumcu, M. & R. Zachow. (2007). Developmental exposure
to environmental endocrine disruptors: Consequences within the ovary
and on female reproductive function. Reproductive Toxicology (Elmsford,
N.Y.) 23, 337-352. PMID:
17140764
Translated Title: Effects
of development exposures to environmental endocrine disruptors on
the ovary and female reproductive function.
Conclusions: Review suggests that developmental
exposure to environmental endocrine disruptors causes not only
reproductive anomalies in adulthood, but that these anomalies
may be passed down to future generations.
Weiss, B. (2007). Can endocrine disruptors influence
neuroplasticity in the aging brain? Neurotoxicology. EPub. PMID:
17350099.
Translated Title: Can endocrine
disruptors influence the brain’s natural ability to form new
connections as people age?
Conclusions: Authors suggest
that exposure to environmental contaminants as well as changing
levels of gonadal steroids, may impair the generation of neural
pathways, and as a result may impair cognitive function later
in life.