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Michael H. Dong

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Title: Michael H. Dong


1
Environmental Endocrine Disruptors Part I
Toxicity
Pineal gland
Hypothalamus
Michael H. Dong MPH, DrPA, PhD
Pituitary gland
Thyroid
Parathyroid
gland
gland
Adrenal
Pancreas
glands
Ovaries
Testicles
(women)
(men)
Readings
2
05/30/2004, Elk Grove, California, USA
3
Course Objectives
  • Be familiar with the terms used, especially
    those pertaining to environmental endocrine
    disruption.
  • Undertake a brief review of the human endocrine
    system, which regulates our bodys day-to-day
    function and development.
  • Understand the basic modes of endocrine
    disruption.
  • Appreciate the potential, yet at times even
    dreadful, effects of endocrine disruption.

4
Endocrine Disruption
  • Endocrine disruption can be defined as one or
    more biochemical actions disrupting the endocrine
    system, or as the resultant effects.
  • Its impact on health is not a new concept, as
    evident from the epidemic linking a rare form of
    vaginal cancer to the maternal use of the
    estrogen DES (diethylstilbestrol).
  • A good number of laboratory assays also have
    shown successfully that some pesticides and
    industrial chemicals can induce similar hormonal
    disruption.

5
Endocrine System (I)
  • Cells, organs, and functions in the human or
    animal body are regulated practically every day
    by the endocrine system.
  • Structurally, the endocrine system is a
    collection of ductless glands that secrete
    chemical messages known as hormones.
  • Main function of the endocrine network is to
    maintain homeostasis of and long-term control in
    the body by means of chemical signals. It works
    in parallel with the nervous system to control
    many body functions.

6
Endocrine System (II)
  • The glands that make up the (humans) endocrine
    system are hypothalamus, pituitary, thyroid,
    parathyroid, adrenals, pineal body, pancreas,
    ovaries, and testicles.
  • The primary function of these glands is to
    synthesize and secrete hormones.
  • Acting as bodys messengers, hormones transfer
    information and instructions from one set of
    cells to another the shape of each hormone
    molecule is specific and can bind to certain
    cellular receptors only.

7
Types of Hormones
  • Hormones are typically grouped into three
    classes steroids, amines, and peptides.
  • Nearly all the steroid hormones are lipids
    synthesized from cholesterol they are
    responsible for the development of many male and
    female sex characteristics.
  • Amine hormones are (all) derived from the amino
    acid tyrosine secreted by the thyroid.
  • Most hormones are peptides, thus each with only
    a short chain of amino acids they are
    synthesized largely as proteins first.

8
Hypothalamus, Pituitary
  • The hypothalamus is located below the thalamus,
    in the lower center part of the brain beneath
    this gland is the pituitary, which has the size
    of a pea. Together, these two glands control
    many other endocrine functions.
  • Hormones from the two glands are crucial to
    pregnancy, birth, lactation, and a womans
    menstrual cycle, including ovulation.
  • Growth hormone and antidiuretic hormone are also
    crucial hormones secreted by the anterior and
    posterior pituitary, respectively.

9
(Para)Thyroid, Adrenals
  • Thyroid is located in the front and middle of
    the lower neck thyroxine and T3 are two
    important hormones from this gland.
  • Located within each of the thyroid lobes are a
    pair of tiny oval-shaped glands called
    parathyroid hormones from this gland are the
    most important regulator of serum calcium.
  • The two adrenals are each situated atop of each
    kidney their corticosteroid and catechol-amine
    hormones play an important role in metabolism,
    the immune system, and stress.

10
Pineal, Pancreas
  • The pineal body is located near the center of
    the brain, having the shape of a tiny clone its
    hormone melatonin has significant effects on
    reproduction and daily physiologic cycles, most
    notably the circadian rhythms.
  • Pancreas has both exocrine and endocrine
    functions its bulk is a ducted gland secreting
    digestive enzymes into the small intestine. Its
    endocrine function is by means of its many small
    clusters of endocrine cells, from which the
    hormones glucagons and insulin play an important
    role in regulating blood sugar level.

11
Ovaries, Testicles
  • The female ovaries and the male testicles,
    responsible for many sex characteristics, are
    referred to as the gonad glands or sex organs.
  • Female ovaries synthesize the hormones estrogen
    and progesterone in varying amounts depending on
    where in her cycle a woman is.
  • Testicular production of the sex hormone
    testosterone (a principle androgen) begins during
    fetal development, continues for a short time
    after birth, nearly ceases during childhood, and
    then resumes at puberty.

12
Modes of Disruption (I)
  • There are two basic avenues of endocrine
    disruption, each of which involves primarily two
    modes of biochemical reactions. One avenue is on
    the function or the structure of the glands or
    the target cells, directly or not.
  • The other avenue is on the metabolism and the
    function of hormones that the endocrine glands
    secrete or that the target cells bind to.
  • In all cases, the disruption can lead to either
    an excessive activation or an excessive
    inhibition of a hormones normal function.

13
Modes of Disruption (II)
  • The endocrine glands as a target organ can be
    impaired or affected directly or indirectly
    through certain toxicologic disruptions.
  • For example, their hormone secretion can be
    impaired by an intruders ability to inhibit the
    biosynthesis or the secretion process.
  • Other examples include the secondary endocrine
    toxicity of DES on the ovary and of testosterone
    secretion, and the primary toxicity of nicotine
    on the adrenal, nitrogen on the ovary, and
    estrogens on the pituitary.

14
Modes of Disruption (III)
  • Many foreign substances can mimic certain
    hormones and hence can bind to those target
    cellular sites receptive of natural hormones.
  • Some others can modulate the metabolic pathway
    of certain (sex) hormones still some others can
    speed up the metabolism.
  • In short, the modes of endocrine disruption
    include agonistic and antagonistic receptor
    binding, and those actions that affect the
    biosynthesis, storage, release, transport, and
    clearance of hormones.

15
Pesticides as EEDs (I)
  • Many pesticides have been identified as
    environmental endocrine disruptors (EEDs).
  • More pesticides appear to have an adverse effect
    on the thyroid hormones than on others.
  • Some pesticides that are prominent thyroid
    hormone disruptors are acetochlor, alachlor,
    ethylene thiourea, fipronil, heptachlor, maneb,
    methomyl, and zineb.
  • Mercury, pentachlorophenol, and PCBs are some
    of the thyroid hormone disruptors that are not or
    no longer used as pesticides.

16
Pesticides as EEDs (II)
  • Pesticides identified as environmental endocrine
    disruptors (EEDs) with estrogenic effects
    include DDT, dieldrin, endosulfan, fenvalerate,
    kepone, lindane, methoxychlor, permethrin,
    triadimefon, and triadimenol.
  • Pesticide EEDs considered as androgenic or
    antiandrogenic are atrazine, p,p-DDE, lindane,
    procymidone, vinclozolin, etc.
  • Those affecting the reproductive system are
    fewer, including ketoconazole, oxy-chlordane,
    tributyltin, and trifluraline.

17
Literature Evidence (I)
  • Many in vitro assays are currently used in U.S.
    EPAs mandated Endocrine Disruptor Screening
    Program these assays are used as the first
    tiered test to identify and confirm the potential
    of hundreds (or perhaps thousands) of chemicals
    as endocrine disruptors.
  • There are also sufficient in vivo studies
    showing that many chemicals are capable of
    inducing endocrine disruption, even at very low
    doses comparable to background levels in people
    living in many places.

18
Literature Evidence (II)
  • Field observations in wildlife over the years
    reveal a worrying trend of endocrine disruption
    affecting their population growth.
  • From 1970s to 1980s, a great number of herring
    gulls and other fish-eating birds were noted to
    have deformities caused by exposure to dioxin
    released into the Great Lakes.
  • More astounding is the observation in the 1980s
    that male alligators in Lake Apopka had
    testosterone levels as low as a females and
    penises 25 smaller than the normal males.

19
Literature Evidence (III)
  • Although epidemiologic evidence is harder to
    come by, intriguing observations from
    epidemiology studies continue to emerge.
  • For example, two epidemiology studies had linked
    atrazine to ovarian tumors in Italian women this
    antiandrogenic herbicide is known to be capable
    of affecting steroid metabolism and ovarian
    functions.
  • A more recent study showed that perinatal
    exposure to PCBs is linked to childrens play
    behavior.

20
Impacts of Toxicity Data
  • Evidence shown thus far represents only a small
    fraction of the vast amount of toxicity data on
    endocrine disruption yet it appears to have
    carried the collective weight of evidence for
    biologic plausibility and consistency.
  • A disruptors toxicity is critical, but the
    lesser of the two components of a health risk.
  • The other component tends to offer more
    preventive measures and hence appears to play a
    greater role, in that it counts on the
    disruptors availability for exposure.
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