The gender benders: are environmental 'hormones' emasculating wildlife?Mother Nature. The term conjures up images of a warm, nurturing, bountiful environment. But this sobriquet is proving increasingly apt for another reason -- one that should offer anything but comfort. New studies suggest that through polution and other environmental factors, Mother Nature is exerting a feminizing hormonal influence on the animal kingdom. Over the past 15 years, research has unmasked a number of "environmental hormones" -- chemicals and pollutants that disrupt biological processes, often by mimicking the effects of naturally produced hormones such as the female hormone estrogen. On the ever-growing list of these agents are several restricted or banned pesticides -- including DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. (and its even more toxic metabolite metabolite, organic compound that is a starting material in, an intermediate in, or an end product of metabolism. Starting materials are substances, usually small and of simple structure, absorbed by the organism as food. , DDE (Dynamic Data Exchange) A message protocol in Windows that allows application programs to request and exchange data between them automatically. DDE - Dynamic Data Exchange ), kepone, heptachlor heptachlor: see insecticides. , dieldrin dieldrin: see insecticides. , mirex mirex an effective organic pesticide used in ant control and as a fire retardant; it is, however, very persistent in tissue and now banned because of residue problems. , and toxophene. Some polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´ The hormonal activity of these chemicals usually bears little relationship to their intended function. indeed, there is no way of predicting -- based on structure or function -- which compounds will exhibit a horomnal alter ego A doctrine used by the courts to ignore the corporate status of a group of stockholders, officers, and directors of a corporation in reference to their limited liability so that they may be held personally liable for their actions when they have acted fraudulently or unjustly or when . The fact troubles a number of scientists because such environmental hormones may be contributing to an increased risk of reproductive-system cancers in females. Moreover, prenatal exposure to hormone-like pollutions can detail the developmental processes that establish gender or ensure reproductive success. While the health community has recently begun a host of studies to explore a possible link between estrogenic pollutants and cancers in women, few researchers have focused on the related reproductive risks such environmental hormones may pose for both sexes. That's unfortunate, says Theo Colborn, a zoologist with the World Wildlife Fund in Washington, D.C., because reproductive effects are likely to be "much more widespread." Indeed, she notes, animal data are beginning to suggest that far smaller exposures are needed to trigger reproductive effects than to induce cancers. And because some these reproductive changes may be subtle, they could evade detection for decades--even a lifetime--unless hunted for explicitly. Colborn has convened a number of symposia in the past few years for researchers who study reproductively impaired wildlife populations or laboratory animals exposed to environmental hormones. Most of these scientists she says, describe the links they're finding between impaired reproduction and "hormonal" pollutants as sobering -- if not downright scary. Indeed, she and many other environmental scientists worry that if if hormone-like contaminants can feminize fem·i·nize tr.v. fem·i·nized, fem·i·niz·ing, fem·i·niz·es 1. To give a feminine appearance or character to. 2. To cause (a male) to assume feminine characteristics. male animals, these ubiquitous pollutants may also underlie troubling reproductive-system trends being witnessed in men. Some of the earliest data on unexpected reproductive risks posed by commercial chemicals came in the early 1950s. DDT, a potent and persistent organochlorine or·gan·o·chlo·rine n. Any of various hydrocarbon pesticides, such as DDT, that contain chlorine. pesticide, was shown to cause the eggshells of many birds to thin. In fact, long after the compound was banned in 1972, DDT-thinned eggshells continued to put many embryonic birds--including bald eagles -- at risk of being crushed to death. DDT even wreaked havoc among birds resistant to eggshell thinning, such as sea gulls. Recognition of the extent of these problems, however, didn't emerge until decades after the initial reports of eggshell thinning. Through heavily contaminated gull embryos managed to hatch, reproduction in gull colonies exposed to large amounts of DDT began to decline precipitiously in the late 1960s. Biologists observed not only that many female gulls in these communities were sharing nests with other females--the co-called lesbian gulls--but also that the young within these communities bore grossly feminized reproductive tracts. Female gulls, which should have developed mature reproductive organs Reproductive organs The group of organs (including the testes, ovaries, and uterus) whose purpose is to produce a new individual and continue the species. Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma only on the left side, also carried dicofol di·co·fol n. A pesticide, C14H9Cl5O, containing a small percentage of DDT and used primarily to control mites on crops. spill in 1980, there has been a 90-percent reduction in the number of juvenile alligators at the lake. And in a population of animals that can live to be 60 years old, that's not healthy, he says. Another reluctant toxicologist, Brent Palmer of Ohio University in Athens, ahs begun studying a substance in the blood of egg-laying vertebrates that he suspects will one day prove a sensitive biomarker of exposure to estrogenic pollutants, at least in males. It's vitellogenin Vitellogenin (Vg) (from latin vitellus = yolk and gener = to produce) is a synonymous term for the gene and the expressed protein. The molecule is classified as a glyco-lipo-protein, having properties of a sugar, fat and protein. , the egg-yolk protein. When stimulated by estrogen, the liver produces this protein, then dumps it into the blood. From there it circulates to the ovaries Ovaries The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones. Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma ovaries (ō´v , where it is deposited in an egg. Though males cna produce vitellogenin, usually only females possess sufficient estrogen to do so. That's good, Guillette points out, because "if you have enough estrogen in a male to turn on vitellogenin, then you probably have enough to shut off the normal functioning of the testes testes or testicles Male reproductive organs (see reproductive system). Humans have two oval-shaped testes 1.5–2 in. (4–5 cm) long that produce sperm and androgens (mainly testosterone), contained in a sac (scrotum) behind the penis. ." Working with the red-eared slider, America's most common turtle. Palmer has demonstrated that DDT can turn on vitellogenin production in males. But DDT doesn't elicit the same broad suite of changes that estrogen does. For instance, it fails to trigger the liver's production of two other proteins and it turns on the production of some other substances that estrogen doen't. "So even though DDT is mimicking estrogen in some ways," Palmer points out, "it's not exactly the same." "Certainly, if we can find vitellogenin in males in the wild, that's a sign they've been exposed to an environmental estrogen," he says. However, Palmer is not yet sure whether the converse also holds: that the lack of vitellogenin proves no estrogen was encountered. He says his new data "make me wonder if there might not still be an environmental estrogen present, just one that's having some other effect." Indeed, he says, interpreting the lack of vitellogenin "could prove a very sticky problem." It's not a problem John Sumpter has had to cope with. The rainbow trout rainbow trout Species (Oncorhynchus mykiss) of fish in the salmon family (Salmonidae) noted for spectacular leaps and hard fighting when hooked. It has been introduced from western North America to many other countries. and carp that he and his colleagues have studies throughout the waterways of England and Wales England and Wales are both constituent countries of the United Kingdom, that together share a single legal system: English law. Legislatively, England and Wales are treated as a single unit (see State (law)) for the conflict of laws. have displayed plenty of vitellogenin -- even the males. Sumpter and Charles R. Tyler, biologists at Brunel University in Uxbridge, England, collaborated with scientists from Britain's Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food to measure vitellogenin concentration in fish that were caged and suspended for three weeks in the river outfalls of 30 different sewage treatment plants. In the January CHEMISTRY AND ECOLOGY, these researchers describe finding widely varied production of vitellogenin by the fish. However, "in all cases," they say," exposure of trout to effluent resulted in a very pronounced increase (500- to 100,000-fold, depending on the site) in the [blood] plasma vitellogenin concentration." In some cases, male trout-exhibited vitellogenin concentrations in their bloodstreams typical of mature females during egg productin. Carp showed similar, though far smaller, increases. Attempts to isolate the agent responsible for these increases proved fruitless. However, at least one of the researchers strongly suspected that ethynlestradiol (EE)--the main estrogenic compound in birth-control pills -- was responsible for much of the vitellogenin, effect they observed. He reasoned that women on the pill excreted the EE in the urine and that some share of this chemical may have passed through the water-treatment plants. To test the theory, the researchers incubated fish in aquariums containing dilute concentrations of either estradiol -- the animal kingdom's primary estrogen -- or EE. Concentrations of EE as low as 0.1 nanogam per liter of water caused a significant spike in the animals's production of vitellogenin -- proving EE "very vestigial ves·tig·i·al adj. Occurring or persisting as a rudimentary or degenerate structure. oviducts on the right side. Many males also bore feminine characteristics, such as oviducts, recalls avian toxicologist D. Michael Fry of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. . Moreover, he notes, the males" left goanad "had tissues that were both ovarian and testicular--so it was an intersex intersex /in·ter·sex/ (in´ter-seks) 1. hermaphrodite. 2. pseudohermaphrodite. 3. intersexuality. female intersex a female pseudohermaphrodite. , or hybrid, gonad gonad /go·nad/ (go´nad) a gamete-producing gland; an ovary or testis.gonad´algonad´ial indifferent gonad the sexually undifferentiated gonad of the early embryo. ." To connect these effects with estrogenic pollutants, Fry and his colleagues conducted a number of experiments during the 1980s. In one, they injected eggs of contaminant-free gulls with estradiol or with an estrogenic pesticide such as DDT. When the hatching emerged, they exhibited the same array of feminized sex organs as DDT-contaminated Western gulls on Santa Barbara Island Santa Barbara Island is the smallest of the eight Channel Islands of California at 640 acres (2.6 km²). It is part of Channel Islands National Park. Highest peak of the island is Signal Hill, at 634 feet (193 m). The island is formed by underwater volcanic activity. , off the coast of California. In effect, DDT "chemically castrated cas·trate tr.v. cas·trat·ed, cas·trat·ing, cas·trates 1. To remove the testicles of (a male); geld or emasculate. 2. To remove the ovaries of (a female); spay. 3. " the males, Fry says. He suspects the males' likely lack of interest in mating explains not only why female gulls dominated Santa Barbara Islands's breeding colony in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but also why the females cohabited. More recently, Fry has turned his attention to the effects of other estrogenic pesticides and PCBs. This summer he began studying common terns, a relative of the gull. Fry studied male embryos from nests along New Bedford Harbor, Mass., located near a toxic waste toxic waste is waste material, often in chemical form, that can cause death or injury to living creatures. It usually is the product of industry or commerce, but comes also from residential use, agriculture, the military, medical facilities, radioactive sources, and site contaminated with PCBs. Only four of the 15 males that he analyzed appeared normal. The rest exhibited varying degrees of feminized sex organs. I never set out to do any toxicology," maintains Louis J. Guillette Jr., a reproductive endocrinologist at the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. in Gainsville. But the team he heads has recently distinguished itself as one of the foremost in environmental-hormone toxicology. It all began six years ago, when the state of Florida asked him to find out what makes a good alligator egg. Alligator ranching has become a multi-million-dollar industry in Florida, and ranchers wanted to know how many eggs they could harvest from the wild without jeopardizing the survival of this once-endangered species. So Guillette's team began surveying the hatching rate of eggs on various lakes: in all, more than 1,200 nests accounting for morte than 50,000 alligator eggs. It didn't take long, Guillette says, "before we realized there was something fundamentally different about one lake." It was Apopka, Florida's fourth largest freshwater body. Whereas 70 to 80 percent of the eggs in most alligator nests hatched, between 80 and 95 percent of those from Apopka failed to hatch. Moreover, of the alligators that did hatch at Apopka, roughly half died within two weeks -- a mortality rate at least 10 times that expected for such neonates. As one measure of the health of these animals, Guillette's team began two years ago to examine the fluid that leaks out of eggs at the time of hatching and to analyze it for estrogen and testosterone. In females, estrogen should predominate, whereas males should have more testosterone. Eggs from Lake Woodruff --with normal hatching rates -- displayed those classic patterns. Apopka eggs didn't. One group showed what at first appeared to be the normal female pattern. Another group appeared to be "superfemales," with ratios of estrogen to testosterone twice as high as normal. "We didn't have any group that looked like males," Guillette recalls. It turns out that there were indeed males -- the gators emerging from eggs exhibiting the standard female ratio of hormones. But the concentrations of the hormones contributing to that ratio were not normal. "These animals were making almost no testerone and almost no estrogen," Guillette explains. Six months later, the researchers returned to Lakes Woodruff and Apopka to measure hormones in the young. "We found exactly the same condition that we had seen in the eggs," he says -- "females with about twice the estrogen typical of a female and almost no testosterone in the males." Apopka's animals also possessed feminized internal reproductive organs. The males bore what looked like ovaries, for example, while follicles follicles, n the masses that are embedded in a meshwork of reticular fibers within the lobules of the thyroid gland. See also thyroid gland. in the females possessed not only abnormal eggs, but also far too many eggs. Last summer, Guillette's team collected more than 100 juvenile alligators -- animals 2 to 8 years old -- from each of five lakes. Apopka's gators again distinguished themselves. The phallus phallus /phal·lus/ (fal´us) pl. phal´li 1. penis. 2. a representation of the penis. 3. the primordium of the penis or clitoris that develops from the genital tubercle. on males was one-half to one-third the normal size, and the females' ovaries "looked burned out," Guillette says. Moreover, estrogen and testosterone production in all Apopka gators was minimal -- as if, Guillette says, the ovaries and testes were indeed burned out. What accounts for Apopka's feminized alligators? The culprit is estrogenic pesticides, Guillette testified at an Oct. 21 hearing before the House Subcommittee on Health and the Environment. Tower Chemical Co. for years made the pesticide dicifol -- a molecule that he says looks like DDT with an extra oxygen atom. Production methods at the plant, situated on the shore of Lake Apopka, weren't always ideal, Guillette, says. Spills occurred and much of the dicofol was laced with up to 15 percent DDT or DDE. Tower's defunct plant is now a toxic waste site. While high concentrations of DDT have been measured in Apopka gators, Guillette cautions that this doesn't prove DDT is responsible for the observed feminizaton. To test that link, his team this summer painted gator eggs from Lake Woodruff with concentrations of DDE and dicofol to produce tissue contamination typical of hatchings from Lake Apopka. Through not all their tests have been completed yet, Guillette told SCIENCE NEWS that "we're finding hormone levels in these hatchings that are almost identical to those in Apopka hatchings." He adds, "That's about the closest thing to proof science is ever likely to give." In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , Apopka's gators continue to suffer. Since a catastrophic much more potent" than estradiol, Sumpter's team says. Indeed, they conclude, EE represents one of "the most potent of biologically active molecules." If present in potable potable /pot·a·ble/ (po´tah-b'l) fit to drink. po·ta·ble adj. Fit to drink; drinkable. potable fit to drink. waters, however, EE must occur in concentrations below the limits of detection, the British team found. In fact, Sumpter notes, it was only after their research was completed that his team learned of another possible candidate: nonylphenols (SN: 7/3/93, p.12). These are breakdown products of alkylphenol polyethoxylates (APEs), a class of surfactants first marketed in the 1940s. Today,APEs are used in detergents (including many U.S. dishwashing liquids), pesticides, herbicides, toiletries toi·let·ry n. pl. toi·let·ries An article, such as toothpaste or a hairbrush, used in personal grooming or dressing. toiletries npl → artículos mpl de aseo (= , and products that need to wet surfaces. Through the parent APEs are not estrogenic, Summer describes the nonylphenols as "directly estrogenic" -- which means that they can bind to an activate the body's estrogen receptor estrogen receptor A protein of a superfamily of nuclear receptors for small hydrophilic ligands–eg, steroid hormones, thyroid hormone, vitamin D, retinoids; the presence of ERs in breast CA generally is associated with a better prognosis, as they respond to . Though nonylphenols occur in concentrations of more than 1 milligram milligram /mil·li·gram/ (mg) (mil´i-gram) one thousandth (10-3) of a gram. mil·li·gram n. Abbr. mg A metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a gram. per liter of water in poor-quality English rivers -- especially downstream of textile mills -- concentrations if 1 to 50 micrograms per liter [micro]g/1) are more typical of waters in England and Europe, Sumpter says. U.S. concentrations, by contrasts, tend to fall below 1 [micro]g/1. "Because of their ubiquitous presence in the aquatic environment and the 'high' concentrations," Summer told SCENCE NEWS, "we consider them a good candidate to account for the estrogenic effects [found in the study with trout and carp]." Through only perhaps 1/10,000 as potent as EE, nonylphenols "are pretty resistant to degradation and [they] bioaccumulate, which will increase the likelihood of them producing physiological effects," he argues. But nonlyphenols are not the only products formed by the breakdown of APEs. And because many of those others are not monitored, Sumpter says, "the total concentration of all the closely related degradation products remains unknown." Environmental estrogens Estrogens Hormones produced by the ovaries, the female sex glands. Mentioned in: Acne, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome estrogens (es´trōjenz), n. are also suspected of playing a role in reproductive problems plaguing the Florida panther, a species whose surviving members total only 30 to 50 animals. Between 1985 and 1990, 67 percent of male Florida panthers wer born with one or more undescended testes Undescended Testes Definition Also known as cryptorchidism, undescended testes is a congenital condition characterized by testicles that do not extend to the scrotum. Description In the fetus, the testes are in the abdomen. , a condition known as cryptorchidism cryptorchidism /crypt·or·chid·ism/ (krip-tor´kid-izm) failure of one or both testes to descend into the scrotum.cryptor´chid Cryptorchidism . Just 10 years earlier, only 14 percent of males were cryptorchid cryptorchid an animal with undescended testes. Called also rig, ridgling. , observes Charles Facemire, an ecological geneticist ge·net·i·cist n. A specialist in genetics. geneticist a specialist in genetics. geneticist with the U.S. Fish Wildlife Service in Atlanta. In addition, he notes, at least one noncryptorchid male is sterile, and even some of the apparently normal males produce abnormal or deformed sperm. Initially, these problems were assumed to trace to a loss of genetic diversity in the heavily inbred in·bred adj. 1. Produced by inbreeding. 2. Fixed in the character or disposition as if inherited; deep-seated. inbred said of offspring produced by inbreeding. species (SN: 9/25/93, p.200), Facemire says. But a few months ago, he and Mike Dunbar, a veterinarian veterinarian /vet·er·i·nar·i·an/ (vet?er-i-nar´e-an) a person trained and authorized to practice veterinary medicine and surgery; a doctor of veterinary medicine. vet·er·i·nar·i·an n. with the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission in Gainesville, decided to investigate whether estrogenic contaminants might also be contributing to these reproductive problems. Their initial blood sampling program turned up males with unusual steriod hormone ratios. For instance, one male had nearly twice as much estrogen as testosterone. (This animal should have had two to three times as much testosterone as estrogen.) At least two other males had similarly skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data ratios; both of them were also cryptorchid. Equally perplexing per·plex tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es 1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate. , at least one female had more testosterone than estrogen. "We don't know enough about the species to know if these hormone levels might be normal under certain circumstances. But we don't think they are," Facemire says. Though genetic problems cannot be ruled out, he acknowledges, "I suspect we're going to find that the problems are due more to estrogenic chemicals in the environment." Working under that assumption, Facemire's office has just issued a prohibition on the use of estrogenic chemicals -- principally pesticides -- in the 100 or so federally managed wildlife refuges in the southeastern United States. At the same time, Facemire's office has initiated four other investigations into possible effects of environmental hormones on wildlife--including one involving the prothonotary warbler in Alabama and another involving sea turtles in Georgia. Nor are these the only animal studies linking reproductive changes with exposures to hormone-mimicking contaminants. Laboratory studies on fish at the University of Guelph The University of Guelph is a medium-sized university located in Guelph, Ontario, established in 1964. While the U of G offers degrees in many different disciplines, the university is best known for its focus on life sciences, based in part on a long-standing history of in Ontario, for instance, have shown that white suckers exposed to papermill effluent--often rich in dioxins and related compounds--took longer to mature, developed smaller gonads, experienced reduced fertility, and had lower than normal concentrations of steriod hormones in their blood. Moreover, Glen Van Der Kraak and his coworkers reported at an international meeting on the topic in September 1990, male fish exposed to papermill wastes developed reduced secondary sex characteristics. Other researchers have begun linking reproductive problems in salmon to relatively high concentrations of hormone-like contaminants. And at a conference sponsored by the U.S. and Canadian governments three years ago, PCBs in such fish were linked to dramatic declines in the reproduction of minks and otters around the Great Lakes. Finally, University of Wisconsin scientists demonstrated two years ago that low prenatal exposures to dioxin femanized the behavior of male rats during adulthood-- and sharply reduced their production of sperm. Indeed, the researchers concluded, the developing male reproductive system appears to be more sensitive to the effects of this hormone-like toxicant toxicant /tox·i·cant/ (tok´si-kant) 1. poisonous. 2. poison. tox·i·cant n. 1. A poison or poisonous agent. 2. An intoxicant. adj. that any other organ or organ-system studied (SN: 5/30/92, p.359). Because we're only just getting to the basics in this field," Palmer says, even simple questions about the reproductive effects of environmental hormones for most species must go unanswered. But he suspects that biologists are going to have to move fast in finding those answers if some contaminated populations are to survive. Toxic-pollutant concentrations in the environment have dropped to where they can seldom kill most adult animals outright, he says. However, in some species, he fears, "We may have gotten to a point where the adults look healthy but are so reproductively impaired that that population may already be extinct--and we're just waiting for the last remaining adults to die [of old age]." |
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