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Pollution fallout: are unattractive males Great-gram's fault?


A new study of mate preferences in rodents raises the prospect that pollutant exposures can have behavioral repercussions repercussions nplrépercussions fpl

repercussions nplAuswirkungen pl 
 that persist generation after generation. In the experiment, female rats shunned males whose grandfathers had been exposed in the womb to a fungicide fungicide (fŭn`jəsīd', fŭng`gə–), any substance used to destroy fungi. Some fungi are extremely damaging to crops (see diseases of plants), and others cause diseases in humans and other animals (see fungal infection).  used on fruit crops.

Though brief, the vinclozolin exposures occurred when the fetal males' reproductive organs were developing. The laboratory doses were "four- to fivefold higher than you might expect to see in the environment," notes Michael K. Skinner of Washington State University Washington State University, at Pullman; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1890, opened 1892 as an agriculture college. From 1905 to 1959 it was the State College of Washington.  in Pullman. Some farm workers might incur similar doses, he says.

The fungicide, known as a hormone mimic, prevents male-sex hormones from binding to cells (SN: 7/2/94, p. 15).

The hormones then can not correctly program gene activity in the male fetus' reproductive organs. Reproductive tissues in fetal females appear unaffected.

Skinner's team reported 2 years ago that although neither the animals nor their descendants encountered the fungicide again, all the males exposed in utero developed cancers and other diseases in middle age, as did all their male descendants.

The vinclozolin exposure didn't cause mutations, notes evolutionary biologist David Crews, who led the new study with neuroscientist Andrea C. Gore, both at the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System.
The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas
. The fungicide instead altered regulatory switches--methyl groups that can bind to DNA--thereby misprogramming some unidentified genes that later become inappropriately active or inactive. Scientists refer to methylation methylation,
n a phase-II detoxification pathway in the liver; methyl groups combine with toxins to rid the body of various substances.

methylation
(meth´
 of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 as an epigenetic epigenetic /epi·ge·net·ic/ (-je-net´ik)
1. pertaining to epigenesis.

2. altering the activity of genes without changing their structure.
 influence.

The new study examined 24 young-adult rats, 12 male and 12 female, provided by Skinner. Half of the animals had a grandfather that had been exposed prenatally to the fungicide.

Crews and Gore designed tests to see whether fungicide exposure in a previous generation influences an animal's attractiveness as a mate. They presented each individual with two opposite-sex rats at a time--one from an unexposed line, the other from a vinclozolin-affected line. The researchers measured how long the test animal spent in the area closest to each of the opposite-sex rats. Wire screens separated the animals.

Regardless of their exposure history, males distinguished between females from the fungicide-exposed or the clean line. However, after briefly checking out pairs of males, females from both groups spent most of their time hovering near the males from the unexposed line. To the researchers, all the males appeared healthy.

A report of the study was posted online this week for publication in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

The team suspects that epigenetic changes, triggered by the fungicide two generations back, altered the males' scent signals. However, Crews' team also recently identified epigenetic changes in the brains of the vinclozolin descendants.

Reproductive biologist Frederick vom Saal of the University of Missouri-Columbia calls the behavioral findings "scary stuff." Scientists hadn't expected parents' lifelong collection of epigenetic changes to reach the next generation. "What's interesting," vom Saal says, is that "a fetus may escape normal deprogramming Deprogramming refers to actions to persuade or force a person to abandon allegiance to a religious or political group.

Deprogramming is normally commissioned by concerned relatives of the follower, often parents of adult children, and is taken against his/her will, which has
" that wipes clean the epigenetic record.

"That it even impacts behavior," he adds--"that's wild."

The new finding also suggests that cleaning up a polluted area may not erase its impacts on exposed populations, vom Saal says.

"It is all pretty remarkable--and novel" agrees L. Earl Gray Jr., a reproductive toxicologist with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  in Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , N.C. However, he adds that he and his colleagues have reservations because the sample size is so small and the animals in each group came from just two litters.

Gray says that if the finding is confirmed in a larger group of unrelated animals, it would have major implications.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Raloff, J.
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 31, 2007
Words:592
Previous Article:Is your phone out of juice? Biological fuel cell turns drinks into power.(This Week)
Next Article:Honey, I ate the kids: and maybe it wasn't a bad idea.



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