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Author Response: Microplastics are present in women’s and cows’ follicular fluid and polystyrene microplastics compromise bovine oocyte function in vitro
Summary
Researchers found microplastics — predominantly polystyrene — in the follicular fluid surrounding eggs in both women and cows undergoing fertility treatment, and showed in laboratory tests that these concentrations were enough to impair the development of bovine egg cells. This is one of the first studies to directly link real-world microplastic exposures in reproductive tissue to measurable harm, raising the possibility that the global rise in plastic pollution may be contributing to declining fertility rates in humans and animals.
The past several decades have seen alarming declines in the reproductive health of humans, animals and plants. While humans have introduced numerous pollutants that can impair reproductive systems (such as well-documented endocrine disruptors), the potential for microplastics (MPs) to be contributing to the widespread declines in fertility is particularly noteworthy. Over the same timespan that declines in fertility began to be documented, there has been a correlated shift towards a “throw-away society” that is characterised by the excessive consumption of single-use plastic products and a concomitant accumulation of MPs pollution. Studies are showing that MPs can impair fertility, but data have been limited to rodents that were force-fed hundreds of thousands of times more plastics than they would be exposed in the environment. As a first step to link in vitro health effects with in vivo environmental exposure, we quantified microplastics in the follicular fluid of women and domestic cows. We found that the concentrations of polystyrene microplastics that naturally occurred in follicular fluid were sufficient to compromise the maturation of bovine oocytes in vitro. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that microplastics may also be contributing to the widespread declines in fertility that have been occurring over recent Anthropocene decades.
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