Male reproductive disorders and the role of endocrine disruption: Advances in understanding and identification of areas for future research

Sharpe, RM; Skakkebaek, NE

HERO ID

1598436

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2003

HERO ID 1598436
In Press No
Year 2003
Title Male reproductive disorders and the role of endocrine disruption: Advances in understanding and identification of areas for future research
Authors Sharpe, RM; Skakkebaek, NE
Journal Pure and Applied Chemistry
Volume 75
Issue 11-12
Page Numbers 2023-2038
Abstract This review addresses whether there is a secular increasing trend in mate reproductive developmental disorders (cryptorchidism, hypospadias, testis cancer, low sperm counts), and highlights the limitations of available data and how these issues are being addressed. These disorders are considered to represent a syndrome of disorders [testicular dysgenesis syndrome (TDS)] with a common origin in fetal life, and in which "endocrine disruption" plays a central role. The potential involvement of environmental estrogens in the etiology of these disorders is reviewed in light of new understanding about the pathways and dose-effect relationships of estrogen action on male reproductive development. Several new pathways of estrogen action have been identified, including suppression of the production of testosterone and insulin-like factor-3 by fetal/neonatal Leydig cells and suppression of androgen receptor expression in androgen target tissues. It is tentatively concluded that identified environmental chemicals are unlikely to activate these pathways because of their intrinsically weak estrogenicity. However, chemicals that may alter endogenous estrogen production, bioavailability, or inactivation represent a new focus of concern. Additionally, environmental chemicals that alter endogenous levels of androgens in the rat fetus (certain phthalates) induce a similar collection of disorders to TDS. Whether human exposure to such compounds might contribute to TDS remains to be shown, but studies in animals should help to define susceptible pathways for induction of TDS.
Doi 10.1351/pac200375112023
Wosid WOS:000188233800030
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000188233800030
Is Public Yes