Differences in endocrine and reproductive responses to substance exposure across generations: highlighting the importance of complementary findings
This article analyzes the results from 112 Extended One-Generation Reproductive Toxicity studies. The objective was to determine if test animals show consistent endocrine and reproductive effects within the same and across different generations and life stages. The analysis, grounded in a comprehens...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of toxicology 2024-10, Vol.98 (10), p.3215-3230 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This article analyzes the results from 112 Extended One-Generation Reproductive Toxicity studies. The objective was to determine if test animals show consistent endocrine and reproductive effects within the same and across different generations and life stages. The analysis, grounded in a comprehensive Binary Matrix, included 530 observed effects and 193 unique, statistically significant associations. Associations’ strength was quantified using Jaccard (
J
) coefficients to measure effect co-occurrence in the same study. Associated effects co-occur infrequently across the whole dataset (median
J
= 0.231). However, specific patterns emerged: associations of same effects across generations exhibited a higher strength (median
J
= 0.400) compared to associations of different effects (median
J
= 0.222). Notably, associations with effects observed in both the parental animals of the adult first filial generation (P1) and developing second filial generations (dF2) demonstrated
J
coefficients (with medians ranging from 0.300 to 0.430) that were approximately twofold higher than those of other associations. Consistently, equivalent life stage associations across generations revealed statistically significant higher association strengths for the P1 and dF2 generations (median
s
of 0.375 and 0.333, respectively) compared to other generations (medians of 0.200 and 0.174), possibly due to longer exposure duration and altered cross-talk between pregnant P1 dam and its conceptus. Overall, it is concluded that co-occurrence of associated effects in the same study is rather infrequent and that associations with effects in P1 and dF2 are stronger than all other associations. In general, the findings underscore the importance of independently analyzing each effect per generation due to the generally low co-occurrence rates of associated effects, challenging traditional expectations of generational continuity in toxic effects.
Highlights
Identifying endocrine and reproductive toxicants is crucial for safeguarding the ability for humans to reproduce, as well as for protecting human embryos, fetuses, and children.
This objective requires that the intrinsic toxic properties related to endocrine and reproductive health are thoroughly investigated.
112 recently conducted Extended One-Generation Reproductive Toxicity studies were evaluated and analyzed for endocrine and reproductive toxicity.
The results show that it is much more common to observe endocrine/reproductive effects |
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ISSN: | 0340-5761 1432-0738 1432-0738 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00204-024-03813-3 |