Title: | "Sources, concentrations, and exposure effects of environmental gestagens on fish and other aquatic wildlife, with an emphasis on reproduction" |
Address: | "University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA. Electronic address: eorlando@umd.edu. University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA. Electronic address: ellestad@umd.edu" |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ygcen.2014.03.038 |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1095-6840 (Electronic) 0016-6480 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Fish and other aquatic wildlife, including frogs, turtles, and alligators, have been used as vertebrate sentinels for the effects of endocrine disrupting and other emerging chemicals of concern found in aquatic ecosystems. Research has focused on the effects of estrogenic, androgenic, and thyroidogenic compounds, but there is a growing body of literature on the reproductive health exposure effects of environmental gestagens on aquatic wildlife. Gestagens include native progestogens, such as progesterone, and synthetic progestins, such as gestodene and levonorgestrel, which bind progesterone receptors and have critically important roles in vertebrate physiology, especially reproduction. Roles for progestogen include regulating gamete maturation and orchestrating reproductive behavior, both as circulating hormones and as secreted pheromones. Gestagens enter the aquatic environment through paper mill effluent, wastewater treatment plant effluent, and agricultural runoff. A number of gestagens have been shown to negatively affect reproduction, development, and behavior of exposed fish and other aquatic wildlife at ng/L concentrations, and these compounds have been measured in the environment at single to 375 ng/L. Given the importance of endogenous progestogens in the regulation of gametogenesis, secondary sex characteristics, and reproductive behavior in vertebrates and the documented exposure effects of pharmaceutical progestins and progesterone, environmental gestagens are an emerging class of contaminants that deserve increased attention from researchers and regulators alike. The potential for environmental gestagens to affect the reproductive health of aquatic vertebrates seems evident, but there are a number of important questions for researchers to address in this nascent field. These include identifying biomarkers of gestagen exposure; testing the effects of environmentally relevant mixtures; and determining what other physiological endpoints and taxa might be affected by exposure to environmental gestagens" |
Keywords: | "Amphibians Animals Animals, Wild/physiology Endocrine Disruptors/chemistry/*pharmacology Fishes/*physiology Levonorgestrel/chemistry/pharmacology Male Progesterone/chemistry/pharmacology Progestins/chemistry/*pharmacology Reproduction/*drug effects Reptil;" |
Notes: | "MedlineOrlando, Edward F Ellestad, Laura E eng Review 2014/04/25 Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2014 Jul 1; 203:241-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2014.03.038. Epub 2014 Apr 20" |