IJMS, Free Full-Text

Description

Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) are a group of flame retardants used in a variety of artificial materials. Despite being phased out in most industrial countries, they remain in the environment and human tissues due to their persistence, lipophilicity, and bioaccumulation. Populational and experimental studies demonstrate the male reproductive toxicity of PBDEs including increased incidence of genital malformations (hypospadias and cryptorchidism), altered weight of testes and other reproductive tissues, altered testes histology and transcriptome, decreased sperm production and sperm quality, altered epigenetic regulation of developmental genes in spermatozoa, and altered secretion of reproductive hormones. A broad range of mechanistic hypotheses of PBDE reproductive toxicity has been suggested. Among these hypotheses, oxidative stress, the disruption of estrogenic signaling, and mitochondria disruption are affected by PBDE concentrations much higher than concentrations found in human tissues, making them unlikely links between exposures and adverse reproductive outcomes in the general population. Robust evidence suggests that at environmentally relevant doses, PBDEs and their metabolites may affect male reproductive health via mechanisms including AR antagonism and the disruption of a complex network of metabolic signaling.

IJMS, Free Full-Text, spider silk tibia

IJMS, Free Full-Text

IJMS Free Full-Text Smooth Muscle Specific Ablation Of, 58% OFF

IJMS, Free Full-Text

IJMS, Free Full-Text, kit lamine sci

IJMS, Free Full-Text

IJMS, Free Full-Text, bäumlein 108 led

IJMS, Free Full-Text, roqueiro brasileiro que morreu em maio de

IJMS, Free Full-Text

IJMS, Free Full-Text, kit lamine sci

Ijms Free Full Text The Nad Dependent Deacetylase Sirtuin

Ijms Free Full Text Disorders Of Sex Developmentnovel Regulators

IJMS, Free Full-Text

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

$ 15.99USD
Score 4.5(690)
In stock
Continue to book