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Invertebrates facing environmental contamination by endocrine disruptors: Novel evidences and recent insights

Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 2020 66 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Virginie Cuvillier‐Hot, Alain Lenoir

Summary

Researchers review the emerging evidence for endocrine disruption in invertebrates from anthropogenic chemicals, highlighting how invertebrate-specific hormonal pathways require dedicated research beyond vertebrate models, and noting that omics technologies now offer new tools to characterize disruption of these poorly understood systems across diverse invertebrate species.

The crisis of biodiversity we currently experience raises the question of the impact of anthropogenic chemicals on wild life health. Endocrine disruptors are notably incriminated because of their possible effects on development and reproduction, including at very low doses. As commonly recorded in the field, the burden they impose on wild species also concerns invertebrates, with possible specificities linked with the specific physiology of these animals. A better understanding of chemically-mediated endocrine disruption in these species has clearly gained from knowledge accumulated on vertebrate models. But the molecular pathways specific to invertebrates also need to be reckoned, which implies dedicated research efforts to decipher their basic functioning in order to be able to assess its possible disruption. The recent rising of omics technologies opens the way to an intensification of these efforts on both aspects, even in species almost uninvestigated so far.

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