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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Remediation Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Long‐term nanoplastics exposure contributes to impaired steroidogenesis by disrupting the hypothalamic‐testis axis: Evidence from integrated transcriptome and metabolome analysis

Journal of Applied Toxicology 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zhou Yan, Qian He, Zhou Yan, Zhou Yan, Yunxiao Yang, Yunxiao Yang, Zhou Yan, Caiyan Xie, Yunxiao Yang, Xin Li, Caiyan Xie, Caiyan Xie, Lei Luo, Caiyan Xie, Zhou Yan, Mingzhe Zhang, Zhou Yan, Yunxiao Yang, Zebin Lai, Zebin Lai, Qian He, Lei Luo, Qian He, Qian He, Qian He, Zhou Yan, Zhou Yan, Qian He, Kunming Tian Lei Luo, Kunming Tian Kunming Tian Yunxiao Yang, Kunming Tian Kunming Tian Kunming Tian Kunming Tian Mengyuan Qu, Kunming Tian

Summary

Researchers exposed male mice to nanoplastics for 12 weeks and found that long-term exposure disrupted the hormonal signaling pathway between the brain and testes, leading to reduced sperm quality and lower testosterone levels. Evidence indicates that the disruption involved changes in key enzymes and metabolic pathways responsible for producing reproductive hormones.

Body Systems
Models

Cumulative evidence suggested that nanoplastics (NPs) cause male toxicity, but the mechanisms of which are still misty. Steroidogenesis is a key biological event that responsible for maintaining reproductive health. However, whether dysregulated steroidogenesis is involved in NPs-induced impaired male reproductive function and the underlying mechanism remains unclear. In our study, Balb/c mice were continuously exposed to pristine-NPs or NH<sub>2</sub>-NPs for 12 weeks, spanning the puberty and adult stage. Upon the long-term NPs treatment, the hypothalamus and testis were subjected to transcriptome and metabolome analysis. And the results demonstrated that both primitive-NPs and NH<sub>2</sub>-NPs resulted in impaired spermatogenesis and steroidogenesis, as evidenced by a significant reduction in sperm quality, testosterone, FSH, and LH. The expression of genes involved in hypothalamic-pituitary-testis (HPT) axis, such as Kiss-1 and Cyp17a1 that encoded the key steroid hormone synthetase, was also diminished. Furthermore, the phosphatidylcholine and pantothenic acid that mainly enriched in glycerophospholipid metabolism were significantly reduced in the testis. Comprehensive analysis of the transcriptome and metabolome indicated that down-regulated Cyp17a1 was associated with decreased metabolites phosphatidylcholine and pantothenic acid. Overall, we speculate that the disturbed HPT axis induced by long-term NPs contributes to disordered glycerophospholipid metabolism and subsequently impaired steroidogenesis. Our findings deepen the understanding of the action of the mechanism responsible for NPs-induced male reproductive toxicology.

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